Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) has been shown to be superior to American Society of Anaesthetist classification (ASA) in predicting peri-operative risk. The most common performance status used is the World Health Organisation (WHO) (0-4), with a clinician agreed differentiation of the subsets of 0-2 and 3-4; variability also exists within these subsets. With this there rises a concern that fit older patients may not be offered appropriate chemotherapy treatment. This observational study will assess whether cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) offers additional benefit over that of WHO Performance status (PS) in the assessment of patients fitness for palliative chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer, by identifying those patients who might survive longer and tolerate chemotherapy better, thus predicting their outcome.


Clinical Trial Description

Chemotherapy is widely used to treat a variety of cancers, and is associated with significant complications and even death. The established method for assessing patient fitness is by developing a clinical assessment of patient fitness, and classifying this using a performance status tool. Pancreatic Cancer patients with poorer performance status have been shown to have lower median survival of just 4 months. There is also evidence that patients with poorer performance status have lower response rates to other chemotherapy, higher complication rates, shorter progression free and overall survival. In clinical practice patients with performance status 2 are often offered chemotherapy, even though there is little evidence of its benefit, as the numbers of patients included in clinical trials with PS 2 is low and benefits from chemotherapy appear to be more modest. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing is a non-invasive test that allows quantification of fitness. It is an objective measure of function capacity/fitness. It has been used in patients due to undergo major surgical intervention, and has the ability to identify those patients who are at higher risk of complications and mortality. CPET has been shown to be superior to the ASA in predicting peri-operative risk. The ASA classification is similar to PS in that it is graded from 1-4, and is a bedside assessment. Despite the ability of PS to predict outcome it is a fairly blunt tool. The WHO PS is the most commonly used and is graded from 0-4. The categories are broad, for example a WHO PS of 0 could refer to a marathon runner or an elderly patient who is normally relatively inactive. Differentiating between grades is subject to observer error. There is reasonably good agreement between clinicians when differentiating between WHO grade 0-2 and 3-4, however variability exists within these subsets. More recently it has been noted that it is harder to clinically assess older patients, and there is concern that many fit older patients are not being offered appropriate treatment. This is the subject of a current Department of Health (DoH) equality initiative. The investigators are interested in identifying whether (CPET) offers additional benefit over that of WHO PS in the assessment of patients fitness for palliative chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer, by identifying those patients who might survive longer and tolerate chemotherapy better, thus predicting their outcome. The CPET variables most commonly used in risk prediction models are the volume of oxygen taken up at the anaerobic threshold relative to body mass (maximal oxygen consumption,VO2 at anaerobic threshold (AT)), the Peak oxygen uptake achieved during the exercise test relative to body mass (VO2 peak) and the oxygen pulse (O2 pulse) which is a derivative value involving oxygen uptake and the heart rate. The benefit of CPET will be determined by the following: - Overall survival at 6 months - Response Rate (Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors criteria (RECIST) version 1.1) - 60 day all-cause mortality - Grade 3 and above adverse events (CTCAE v4) related to chemotherapy - Chemotherapy dose intensity (% of planned doses given) - Progression free survival (RECIST criteria version 1.1) - European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) quality of Life questionnaires (QLQ): to assess quality of life of cancer patients (QLQC30 (version 3)) and participants with pancreatic cancer (QLQ-PAN26)and a health survey 36 questionnaire (RAND 36-item short form health survey 1.0). - Overall survival ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03215459
Study type Observational
Source The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust
Contact Simon A Winn, BSc
Phone 0151 7055264
Email simon.winn@liv.ac.uk
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date February 1, 2021
Completion date September 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05305001 - Germline Mutations Associated With Hereditary Pancreatic Cancer in Unselected Patients With Pancreatic Cancer in Mexico
Completed NCT02526017 - Study of Cabiralizumab in Combination With Nivolumab in Patients With Selected Advanced Cancers Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05497531 - Pilot Comparing ctDNA IDV vs. SPV Sample in Pts Undergoing Biopsies for Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Cancers N/A
Recruiting NCT04927780 - Perioperative or Adjuvant mFOLFIRINOX for Resectable Pancreatic Cancer Phase 3
Recruiting NCT06054984 - TCR-T Cells in the Treatment of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05919537 - Study of an Anti-HER3 Antibody, HMBD-001, With or Without Chemotherapy in Patients With Solid Tumors Harboring an NRG1 Fusion or HER3 Mutation Phase 1
Terminated NCT03140670 - Maintenance Rucaparib in BRCA1, BRCA2 or PALB2 Mutated Pancreatic Cancer That Has Not Progressed on Platinum-based Therapy Phase 2
Terminated NCT00529113 - Study With Gemcitabine and RTA 402 for Patients With Unresectable Pancreatic Cancer Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05168527 - The First Line Treatment of Fruquintinib Combined With Albumin Paclitaxel and Gemcitabine in Pancreatic Cancer Patients Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT04383210 - Study of Seribantumab in Adult Patients With NRG1 Gene Fusion Positive Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05391126 - GENOCARE: A Prospective, Randomized Clinical Trial of Genotype-Guided Dosing Versus Usual Care N/A
Terminated NCT03300921 - A Phase Ib Pharmacodynamic Study of Neoadjuvant Paricalcitol in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer A Phase Ib Pharmacodynamic Study of Neoadjuvant Paricalcitol in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer Phase 1
Completed NCT03153410 - Pilot Study With CY, Pembrolizumab, GVAX, and IMC-CS4 (LY3022855) in Patients With Borderline Resectable Adenocarcinoma of the Pancreas Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03175224 - APL-101 Study of Subjects With NSCLC With c-Met EXON 14 Skip Mutations and c-Met Dysregulation Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05679583 - Preoperative Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy in Patients With Resectable Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04183478 - The Efficacy and Safety of K-001 in the Treatment of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2/Phase 3
Terminated NCT03600623 - Folfirinox or Gemcitabine-Nab Paclitaxel Followed by Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04584008 - Targeted Agent Evaluation in Digestive Cancers in China Based on Molecular Characteristics N/A
Recruiting NCT05351983 - Patient-derived Organoids Drug Screen in Pancreatic Cancer N/A
Completed NCT04290364 - Early Palliative Care in Pancreatic Cancer - a Quasi-experimental Study