View clinical trials related to Spindle Cell Sarcoma of Bone.
Filter by:The study is a first step of a process to establish the standard chemotherapy treatment with the aim to improve outcome for patients with these rare tumours. For this reason the study will be non-controlled clinical trial. In this regard, the study aims to determine the feasibility of intensive chemotherapy in this age group, and/or separate efficacy analyses according to the different histologic categories and whether the number of patients recruited by the co-operating groups permits future randomised studies.
Methotrexate is one of the most effective chemotherapy drugs in the treatment of osteosarcoma and some other types of bone sarcoma which are treated the same way as osteosarcoma. However, it frequently leads to sore mouth, tummy pain and increased risk of developing infections. The investigators try to save or "rescue" normal cells from the side effects of methotrexate by giving a drug called folinic acid. Folinic acid is started 24 hours after methotrexate and given regularly until methotrexate levels are really low and not dangerous to normal cells anymore. Despite this rescue, side effects are still a problem and many patients are not well enough to receive subsequent chemotherapy on time. Almost half of the planned chemotherapy cycles are not given on time due to methotrexate side effects. In this study the investigators will examine if adding a drug called glucarpidase to folinic acid is helpful. Glucarpidase is an enzyme that inactivates methotrexate in the blood stream. Lower methotrexate concentration in the blood stream leads to fewer side effects. The investigators would like to see if glucarpidase helps patients to have their chemotherapy on time, by reducing the side effects of methotrexate.