Rectal Neoplasms Clinical Trial
Official title:
Palliative Short-Course Radiotherapy in Rectal Cancer: A Phase II Study
Radiotherapy (RT) is a potentially effective method in the treatment of symptoms of rectal carcinomas. Nevertheless, almost all the evidences about palliative RT in rectal cancer have been published more than two decades ago and were based on 2D conventional RT, which is nowadays no longer used. Consequently, prospective studies on the efficacy of 3D-RT in the management of symptomatic rectal cancer are still lacking. The aim of this prospective study was to assess the efficacy of palliative short-course 3D RT (SCRT) in patients with symptomatic obstructive rectal cancer.
Colorectal carcinoma is one of the cancers with higher incidence, although a progressive
decrease in both incidence and mortality rates has been recently recorded in European
countries. Rectal cancer may be diagnosed when the disease is at an advanced stage, causing
obstructing symptoms. Colostomy represents a standard treatment option in these patients
although it negatively impacts on quality of life. Consequently, alternative treatments have
been proposed such as self-expandable metallic stent or thermal ablative treatments (i.e.
laser or argon plasma coagulation endoscopic treatments), which are, however, not
complication-free and not always feasible.
Radiotherapy (RT) is a potentially effective method in the treatment of symptoms of rectal
carcinomas. Nevertheless, almost all the evidences about palliative RT in rectal cancer have
been published more than two decades ago and were based on 2D conventional RT, which is
nowadays no longer used. Consequently, prospective studies on the efficacy of 3D-RT in the
management of symptomatic rectal cancer are still lacking.
The aim of this prospective study was to assess the efficacy of palliative short-course 3D
RT (SCRT) in patients with symptomatic obstructive rectal cancer. This trial was a
prospective Phase II study performed at the Fondazione di Ricerca e Cura "Giovanni Paolo II"
in Campobasso (Italy).
Therapy Radiotherapy During the simulation process, patients were immobilized in prone
position on an up-down table, a device aimed at reducing small-bowel irradiation. To limit
the organ motion, patients were instructed to empty the bladder and drink 300 cm3 of water
one hour before CT-simulation and before every daily treatment fraction. After oral
administration of contrast medium to allow bowel localization, simulation CT images were
taken in 5 mm increments over the region of interest. Delineation of the clinical target
volume 1 (CTV1) included the gross tumor volume (GTV, both primary tumor and enlarged pelvic
nodes) and the corresponding mesorectum plus 2 cm cranio-caudally. The planning target
volume (PTV) was the CTV plus 0.8 cm margin in all directions. Organs at risk (OARs) were
contoured as follows: 1) the small intestine was defined as all intestinal loops below the
sacral promontory (recto-sigmoid junction excluded); 2) femoral heads were contoured from
the cranial extremity to the level of the lower margin of ischial tuberosities; 3) the
bladder was contoured entirely with no distinction between the wall and its content.
Conformal three-dimensional RT was planned (3D-RT) using the Oncentra-Masterplan treatment
planning system (Nucletron B.V., Veenendaal, Netherland). Short course RT (total, 25 Gy; 5
fraction in 5 days) was delivered with an isocentric four-field box technique. Dose was
specified according to the ICRU Report 62. Dose-volume histograms (DVHs) were calculated for
the PTV and OARs and the QUANTEC constraints were followed. Radiotherapy was delivered by
10-15 MV photon energy. The beams were delivered by an Elekta Precise Linac (Elekta Oncology
Systems, Crawley, UK) equipped with standard multi leaf collimators (MLC). A daily online
correction protocol of isocenter position was applied using portal imaging, with set-up
correction in case of deviations > 0.5 cm in any direction. All stages of the treatment
planning process were subjected to a systematic independent check procedure, as previously
described. In patients with grade 3-4 toxicity, RT was suspended and treatment was resumed
after recovery from toxicity in the degree ≤ 2.
Chemotherapy Use of chemotherapy was allowed based on the referring physician preferences,
comorbidities and age. Chemotherapy was discontinued during RT, one week before and after
the delivery of RT.
Statistical Analysis Primary end-point of the present study was the rate of complete
response (CR) of obstructive symptoms following radiation treatment. According to the
Simon's optimal design, the study required the enrollment of 9+8 patients in order to detect
a significant rate of CR of obstructive symptoms (error probability limits: alpha 0.05; beta
0.2). In case of no detection of CR of obstructive symptoms in the first 9 enrolled
patients, the interruption of enrollment and the closure of the study were planned. In case
of detection of at least 1 CR of obstructive symptoms the study design required the
recruitment of at least 8 additional patients for the final evaluation of symptoms response
rate. To account for a possible non-participation rate of 5%, we increased the sample size
of the second stage to nine subjects. Continuous variables were reported as median with
range. Categorical variables were reported as proportion and percentage. The survival curves
were computed with the Kaplan-Meier method. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS v.
22 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, US) and Stata 14.1 SE (Stata corporation, College Station, TX,
US)
;
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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