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A Phase I Study of Adjuvant Chemotherapy With GC in Biliary Tract Cancer Undergoing Resection Without Major Hepatectomy

K

Kansai Hepatobiliary Oncology Group

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Biliary Tract Cancer

Treatments

Drug: gemcitabine , cisplatin

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

NETWORK

Identifiers

NCT01297998
UMIN000004622 (Registry Identifier)
KHBO1004

Details and patient eligibility

About

To decide maximum tolerated dose and recommended dose of treatment using gemcitabine plus cisplatin combination therapy in patients with biliary tract cancer undergoing resection without major hepatectomy.

Full description

Surgery currently remains the only potentially curative treatment for biliary tract cancer (BTC), and most patients develop recurrence. Therefore, effective adjuvant chemotherapy is required to increase the curability of surgery and to prolong the survival in these patients. However, to date, no standard adjuvant chemotherapy has been established, and a guideline for BTC treatment recommends that trials of adjuvant chemotherapy be carried out.

Based on results from clinical studies in unresectable BTC, gemcitabine, platinum agent, fluoropyrimidine are considered to have activity against BTC. These agents are expected to be effective in the postoperative adjuvant therapy for BTC, Thus, randomized controlled trials with gemcitabine are ongoing, and the results are expected. Recently, in the ABC-02 study, the first prospective multicenter phase III study in patients with unresectable BTC, gemcitabine/cisplatin combination chemotherapy was compared with gemcitabine monotherapy and showed that the combination therapy significantly prolonged MST (from 8.1 to 11.7 months; P < 0.001). Gemcitabine/cisplatin combination therapy is now considered to be the standard regimen for unresectable BTC, and we expect this regimen to be effective for postoperative adjuvant therapy.

Though hepatectomy is frequently performed in surgery for BTC, it is unclear that the effect of anticancer agent is affected by hepatectomy. Because gemcitabine is metabolized by cytidine deaminase primarily in the liver, it considered to have decreased the metabolic ability of gemcitabine after hepatectomy. Some clinical studies demonstrated that patient with hepatectomy could not tolerate the standard dose and schedule of gemcitabine. In the adjuvant chemotherapy with gemcitabine, it is necessary to examine separately whether hepatectomy was undergone or not.

In this study, we aimed to assess the safety and efficacy of gemcitabine/cisplatin combination chemotherapy in patients with biliary tract cancer undergoing curative resection without hepatectomy.

Enrollment

24 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Biliary tract cancer (BTC) with more than stage IB
  2. BTC undergoing R0 or R1 resection without major hepatectomy
  3. Older than 20 years old
  4. PS0 or 1
  5. No treatment other than surgery
  6. No dysfunction of main organs
  7. Possible oral intake
  8. Treatment start; after 4 weeks and within 12 weeks after surgery
  9. Obtained written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  1. Patients with resection of major hepatectomy
  2. Patients with double cancers
  3. Patients having severe allergy
  4. Patients with severe organ dysfunction
  5. Patients with active infectious disease
  6. Pregnancy
  7. Patients with severe psychological disease
  8. Patients seem inadequate for this study by investigators

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

24 participants in 1 patient group

gemcitabine , cisplatin
Experimental group
Treatment:
Drug: gemcitabine , cisplatin

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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