Overview

A Feasibility Study of Chemo-radiotherapy to Treat Operable Oesophageal Cancer

Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2016-05-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
About 7500 patients are diagnosed with oesophageal cancer each year in the UK of which less than a quarter have resectable disease at diagnosis. There is a general lack of consistency in the standard of care for patients across UK hospitals. Patients are either treated with a) chemotherapy followed by surgical removal of the tumour, or b) chemoradiotherapy followed by removal of the tumour by surgery, as part of their standard of care. Recent research supports the latter treatment, as chemoradiotherapy maybe more effective at shrinking the tumour and preventing the disease from spreading than taking chemotherapy alone. However, there is no definitive way of identifying which treatment is best without a clinical trial. Evidence suggests that the effect of the chemoradiotherapy currently used as standard practice may be improved and the side effects reduced by using a different chemoradiotherapy combination. In this trial, eligible patients will receive 2 cycles of the same chemotherapy before being randomised to receive two different chemoradiotherapy regimens (carboplatin and paclitaxel verses oxaliplatin and capecitabine) both of which have shown promising results in previous studies. Patients will then have their tumour removed. The best chemoradiotherapy regimen will then be taken forward to a Phase III trial in which chemoradiotherapy will be compared with chemotherapy alone. The efficacy of the regimens will be measured by counting the number of patients who i) remain free from cancer, ii)have local or distant spread of their cancer, iii) are successfully recruited and iv) experience toxicities. A specific set of toxicity criteria will be used to monitor any treatment induced side-effects and provide justification for any necessary dose modifications or withdrawal of treatment.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Lisette Nixon
Collaborator:
Cancer Research UK
Treatments:
Albumin-Bound Paclitaxel
Capecitabine
Carboplatin
Oxaliplatin
Paclitaxel
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Histologically confirmed operable oesophageal cancer (adenocarcinoma)

- Tumour must be staged as a T3, 4 or N1 (using TNM6 staging) or T3, T4a or N13 using
TNM7 staging)

- Maximum disease (Tumour plus nodes) length 8 cm staged with EUS and CT/PET

- WHO performance status 01

- Adequate haematological, renal, respiratory, cardiac and hepatic function

- The patient has provided written informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Histologically confirmed operable oesophageal cancer (squamous cell carcinoma)

- Uncontrolled angina pectoris, myocardial infarction within 6 months, heart failure,
clinically significant uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmias, or any patient with a
clinically significant abnormal ECG.

- Patients with any previous treatment for oesophageal carcinoma.

- Siewert type 3 oesophagogastric tumours.

- T4 tumours invading contiguous structures other than diaphragm, crura or mediastinal
pleura.

- Patients with disease in any of the following areas on the CT scan, EUS or other
staging investigation:

1. Evidence of metastases in liver, lung, bone or other distant metastases.

2. Abdominal para aortic lymphadenopathy >1cm diameter on CT or >6mm diameter on
EUS.

3. Invasion of tracheo-bronchial tree, aorta, pericardium or lung.

- Lymphadenopathy encasing the coeliac axis (as described above, patients with single
nodes lying anterior to the origin of the splenic artery and anterior to the origin of
the coeliac axis are not excluded).

- Any patient with a single significant medical condition which is thought likely to
compromise his or her ability to tolerate any of the above therapies.

- Specific contraindications to surgery, chemotherapeutic agents (including known
allergies to chemotherapy) or radiotherapy.

- Pregnant or lactating women and fertile women who will not be using adequate
contraception during the trial.