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Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in Indian women, and most patients are diagnosed at advanced stages.
The standard treatment for these stages is concurrent chemoradiotherapy, but this can cause long-term side effects such as bladder inflammation, strictures, ulcers, and tissue damage, which negatively impact patients' quality of life.
Previous studies have shown that oral sodium-copper-chlorophyllin can help reduce radiation-related side effects in rectal, prostate, and cervical cancer patients. However, no study has compared side effects between patients receiving standard follow-up care and those taking sodium-copper-chlorophyllin during follow-up.
We hypothesize that the use of sodium-copper-chlorophyllin as a short-duration adjuvant is associated with reduced incidence of late grade 2 or higher gastrointestinal and genitourinary toxicities compared to patients receiving standard-of-care follow-up.
Full description
Descriptive summary
Objectives
Primary objective
• To assess the effectiveness of adjuvant sodium-copper-chlorophyllin in reducing the cumulative incidence of late grade 2 or higher RT-related gastrointestinal and genitourinary toxicity in cervix cancer patients, measured using the time-to-event method
Secondary objectives
Trial Design
This is a parallel-arm, randomized Phase III trial designed to test whether oral sodium-copper-chlorophyllin can reduce late (grade 2 or higher) gastrointestinal and genitourinary toxicities 24 months after completion of radiotherapy (RT) in cervical cancer patients.
Sample Size
Total of 316 patients will need to be randomized to the two arms in a 2:1 ratio (210 in the treatment group and 106 in the control group), accounting for an estimated 10%loss to follow-up. This sample size calculation was conducted using RPACT Package of R software.
Arm 1 (Test arm): Oral adjuvant sodium-copper-chlorophyllin 750mg given once daily, on an empty stomach for 3 months, starting within 2 weeks of RT completion
Arm 2 (Standard arm): Standard-of-care follow-up (no intervention) post RT
Patient will be selected as per Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria.
Inclusion criteria
Female subjects aged 18 years or above with histologically proven locally advanced
squamous cell or adenocarcinoma of the cervix
Subjects eligible for RT and planned for definitive RT +/- chemotherapy with
brachytherapy.
Subjects who exceed the dose constraints of:
Subjects with adequate haematological, renal, hepatic and coagulation profiles and laboratory parameters within the following ranges:
Subjects willing and able to comply with all study requirements, including treatment (e.g. able to swallow tablets), timing and/or nature of required assessments
Ability to understand and willing to sign an informed consent document
Exclusion criteria
Study Procedure
Criteria for Adverse events
If there is suspicion of disease relapse, treatment will be given at the investigator's discretion.
Any grade 2 or higher nausea, vomiting or other sodium-copper-chlorophyllin-related adverse events will be reported in the case report forms. If any of the above adverse events lead to admission, serious adverse events (SAEs) will be reported to the IEC.
Statistical Plan
In this study, exploratory descriptive analyses and statistical analyses tests such as Kaplan-Meier, Chi-Square, Fisher's analysis and ANOVA will be conducted.
Baseline characteristics of patients in both study arms will be summarized using means and standard deviations for continuous variables and counts and percentages for categorical variables.
The primary efficacy endpoint will be assessed using Kaplan Meier Analysis using two-sided log rank test.
Secondary analyses will include logistic regression to adjust for confounders such as age and cancer stage with subgroup analyses based on HR-CTV and other relevant factors.
Time-to-toxicity will be evaluated using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and log-rank tests for 2- and 3-year outcomes. Haematological parameters will be compared using Chi-Square or Fisher's exact tests.
Changes in Quality of Life (QOL) scores over a 2-year follow-up will be assessed using linear mixed modelling.
Average costs per grade of toxicity and according to arm of the study will be calculated. An Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) test will be considered to determine if there is a difference in costs between grades of toxicity, and an independent sample t-test will be used to determine if the average cost according to study arm is significantly different. The costs of study related additional cystoscopy and sigmoidoscopy are not included.
All analyses will be conducted using SPSS version 28, with a significance level set at 0.05.
Interim and full analyses will be performed.
Anticipated benefits of this study
If the trial results are positive, using adjuvant sodium-copper-chlorophyllin could potentially lower the incidence of late-grade toxicity associated with RT by 10% for cervical cancer.
This has the potential to improve the long-term quality of life for patients and reduce the costs associated with managing treatment-related side effects for both the healthcare system and patients.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Female subjects aged 18 years or above with histologically proven locally advanced squamous cell or adenocarcinoma of the cervix
Subjects eligible for RT and planned for definitive RT +/- chemotherapy with brachytherapy.
Subjects who exceed the dose constraints of:
Subjects with adequate haematological, renal, hepatic and coagulation profiles and laboratory parameters within the following ranges:
Subjects willing and able to comply with all study requirements, including treatment (e.g. able to swallow tablets), timing and/or nature of required assessments
Ability to understand and willingness to sign an informed consent document
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
316 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Supriya Sastri, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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