Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This is a 2-armed randomised controlled trial comparing surgery alone with surgery plus post-operative radiation therapy for patients with completely resected primary melanoma showing histological features of neurotropism. Uncontrolled studies suggest that this form of primary melanoma has a high risk of local recurrence and that postoperative radiation therapy may substantially reduce that risk. Patients who are eligible on the basis of the pathology of the excised melanoma will be offered the opportunity to take part in the trial. Those randomised to receive radiation therapy will be treated with a simple technique encompassing the surgical bed plus a margin. Radiation will commence within 3 months of surgery (maximum of 14 weeks from surgery to start of radiotherapy).


Clinical Trial Description

Background Melanoma is a serious and common malignancy in Australia. It is the third most common cancer in Australia and approximately 1000 Australians will die of the disease each year.At least a quarter of these will be patients under the age of 40 years. Neurotropism, defined as invasion by melanoma of peripheral neural tissue, is a feature of the disease that may predispose towards a high local recurrence rate. Local recurrence, particularly in the head and neck region often requires more extensive, potentially morbid surgery. Neurotropism is especially likely to occur in desmoplastic melanoma where it may be as high as 40 - 60%.6-8 Desmoplastic melanoma tends to occur in a slightly older age group than conventional types of melanoma and most often occurs in the head and neck region in individuals with chronic sun damage. The management of localised neurotropic melanoma has traditionally been with surgery. Recommendations are that surgical margins should be at least 2 cm.There are some patients where this margin is not achievable due to the location of the tumour close to important anatomical structures. Uncontrolled studies suggest that radiation therapy may reduce the risk of local recurrence in those patients although there are no randomised trials to confirm this hypothesis. Postoperative adjuvant radiation therapy has been shown in a randomised trial led from Australia, to reduce regional recurrence rates in nodal melanoma.There are no previously conducted randomised controlled trials addressing a similar question for neurotropic melanoma. The only reports are in relation to retrospective reviews that suggest a benefit for postoperative radiation therapy after surgery. It is unlikely that this trial will be done outside of Australia. Hypotheses 1. Radiation therapy after surgery for neurotropic melanoma improves local control. 2. This can be achieved without a significant increase in treatment morbidity or reduction in quality of life. Primary Objective • To determine, in patients who have undergone surgery with curative intent for neurotropic melanoma, whether there is a difference in the rate and timing of local (in field) recurrence between patients who are treated with post-operative radiation therapy and those that are initially observed. Secondary Objectives - To determine, in these patients, whether there is a difference in progression-free survival, patterns of relapse and overall survival between patients treated with surgery alone and those treated by surgery plus adjuvant radiation therapy. - To determine, in these patients, whether there is a difference in morbidity and quality of life between patients treated with surgery alone and those treated with surgery plus adjuvant radiation therapy Methodology This is a 2-armed randomised controlled trial comparing surgery alone with surgery plus post-operative radiation therapy for patients with completely resected primary melanoma showing histological features of neurotropism. Patients who are eligible on the basis of the pathology of the completely excised melanoma will be offered the opportunity to take part in the trial. Those randomised to receive radiation therapy will be treated with a simple technique encompassing the surgical bed plus a margin within 3 months of surgery. The same regimen which was used in the nodal trial will be used in this study. Patients in the observation arm who subsequently recur in field may be offered further surgery followed by radiation therapy. Randomisation Methods Patients will be randomised in the ratio of 1:1 between the two arms, radiation therapy and no radiation therapy. Allocation to the treatment arm will be stratified by institution and tumour site (head or neck) using randomly permuted blocks. Patients who are eligible on the basis of their pathology of excised melanoma will be offered the opportunity to take part in the trial. While males and females will both be considered equally for participation on the trial, there is no way of knowing if the ratio will be 1:1. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00975520
Study type Interventional
Source Melanoma and Skin Cancer Trials Limited
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 2009
Completion date March 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05094804 - A Study of OR2805, a Monoclonal Antibody Targeting CD163, Alone and in Combination With Anticancer Agents Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT03979872 - Risk Information and Skin-cancer Education for Undergraduate Prevention N/A
Recruiting NCT04986748 - Using QPOP to Predict Treatment for Sarcomas and Melanomas
Enrolling by invitation NCT00068003 - Harvesting Cells for Experimental Cancer Treatments
Recruiting NCT05707286 - Pilot Study to Determine Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Kinetics During Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy
Active, not recruiting NCT05470283 - Phase I, Open-Label, Study of Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes Engineered With Membrane Bound IL15 Plus Acetazolamide in Adult Patients With Metastatic Melanoma Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05077137 - A Feasibility Study Utilizing Immune Recall to Increase Response to Checkpoint Therapy Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT02721459 - XL888 + Vemurafenib + Cobimetinib for Unresectable BRAF Mutated Stage III/IV Melanoma Phase 1
Completed NCT00341939 - Retrospective Analysis of a Drug-Metabolizing Genotype in Cancer Patients and Correlation With Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamics Data
Recruiting NCT05839912 - Excision of Lymph Node Trial (EXCILYNT) (Mel69) N/A
Recruiting NCT04971499 - A Study of Dapansutrile Plus Pembrolizumab in Patients With PD-1 Refractory Advanced Melanoma Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05263453 - HL-085+Vemurafenib to Treat Advanced Melanoma Patients With BRAF V600E/K Mutation Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT05060432 - Study of EOS-448 With Standard of Care and/or Investigational Therapies in Participants With Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 1/Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT06413680 - A First-In Human (FIH) Trial to Find Out if REGN10597 is Safe and How Well it Works for Adult Participants With Advanced Solid Organ Malignancies Phase 1/Phase 2
Terminated NCT03399448 - NY-ESO-1-redirected CRISPR (TCRendo and PD1) Edited T Cells (NYCE T Cells) Phase 1
Completed NCT03348891 - TNF in Melanoma Patients Treated With Immunotherapy N/A
Completed NCT03171064 - Exercise as a Supportive Measure for Patients Undergoing Checkpoint-inhibitor Treatment Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT05539118 - Interferon-α1b Combined With Toripalimab and Anlotinib Hydrochloride in Advanced Unresectable Melanoma Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05171374 - pRospective Evaluation of Clinical Outcomes in Patients With metAsTatIс melanOma Treated With dabrafeNib and trAmetinib in reaL practicE
Withdrawn NCT02854488 - Yervoy Pregnancy Surveillance Study