Uterine Cervical Neoplasms Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Open, Randomized, Multi-center, Phase 2 Trial of Tamoxifen and Letrozole in Recurrent and Persistent Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Cervix: the Efficacy and New Biomarkers
The investigators design a phase 2, open labeled, randomized trial of Tamoxifen (20 mg/day) and Letrozole (2.5 mg) in treatment of squamous carcinoma of the cervix. Forty four patients with recurrent or persistent disease will be recruited, randomized, treated and followed three-monthly for 12 months. The primary end point is the treatment response rates. Secondary end points include survivals, ECOG performance status, quality of life and efficacy of biomarkers in predicting the responses. Candidate biomarkers including ER, PR, GPER and HPV genotype in paraffin cancer tissues as well as methylated genes in the blood will be studied in relation to the therapeutic outcomes.
Although human papillomavirus (HPV) is a necessary cause of cervical cancer, HPV infection
itself is inefficient and insufficient to cause cancer. New evidences have suggested
endogenous and exogenous sex hormones confer risk of developing cervical cancer. In
unscreened populations, incidence of cervical cancer starts after menarche and constantly
increases before menopause, after then the incidence is flattening and declines [21].
Indeed, after menopause, newly incident CIN3 is seldom detected[22]. Large-scale
epidemiological studies also showed high number of full-term pregnancy[23] (rather than
abortion) and long-term use of hormonal contraceptives[24] to be independent risk factors of
cervical cancer. These evidences pointed to female sex hormones to be another culprit of
cervical cancer.
The role of estrogen and ERα on HPV-induced cervical carcinogenesis is best demonstrated by
the pK14-HPV E6/E7transgenic mice which, without estrogen exposure, develop benign skin
tumors only. However, when these mice are treated with exogenous estradiol at physiological
level, they develop cervical cancers in nearly 100% efficiency[25-28]. These cervical
neoplasia recapitulate characteristics of human cervical cancer in all aspects: originated
from the squamous-columnar junction, with early lesions of atypical squamous metaplasia, CIN
and to invasive squamous cell carcinoma [29]. Most importantly, removal of exogenous
estrogen or castration of these mice led to diminish of progression and partial regression
of pre-existing neoplasia[30].
The investigators design an open, randomized, multi-center trial of tamoxifen and letrozole
in treatment of recurrent or persistent squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. Patients with
recurrent or persistent SCC of cervix who are not amenable for further cytotoxic treatment
will be randomized by block and by participating center to one of the two arms. The block
size will be two . Medication will be given orally in daily dose of tamoxifen (Nolvadex) 20
mg, letrozole (Femara) 2.5 mg until disease progression or until the end of the study.
Primary end point of the study is the response rate (complete response and partial response
rates) for tamoxifen and letrozole arms. Secondary end points include progression-free
survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) compared to the historical results, ECOG
Performance Status, quality of life and outcome predictors (biomarkers and clinical
characteristics) of responsiveness and survival. The experienced survival data of the
participating center will be compared.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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