ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

A Study Of Moderately Hypo-Fractionated External-beam Radiotherapy With Concurrent Chemotherapy and High Dose Rate Brachytherapy In Cervical Cancer

A

Ain Shams University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Cervical Carcinoma Stage III
Cervical Carcinoma Stage II
Cervical Carcinoma Stage IIB

Treatments

Radiation: moderate hypofractionation external beam radiotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07343531
MD221/2025

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cancer of the uterine cervix is one of the most common gynecologic cancer diagnosis and cause of death among gynecologic cancers worldwide .The two major histologic types of cervical cancer are squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma and the preinvasive disease that corresponds with these histologies share many of the same risk factors .

Cancer cervix can be treated definitively with concurrent chemoradiation (external beam radiotherapy and chemotherapy) followed by high dose rate brachytherapy. Treatment duration can be shortened by increasing the dose per fraction of treatment, which can improve survival rates, reduce the risk of treatment failure, reduce costs and patient exposure.

Full description

The objective of this study is: to assess the clinical response (as a primary endpoint), acute and a two-year late toxicities (as a secondary endpoint) of moderately hypo-Fractionated external-beam radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy and high-dose rate brachytherapy in cervical cancer.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18 years or older.
  2. International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) IB1 cervical cancers if not surgical candidates, but amenable to definitive chemoradiotherapy.
  3. FIGO Stage IB2, IB3, IIA or IIB cervical cancers
  4. FIGO stage IIIA, IIIB.
  5. FIGO stage IIIC1 cervical cancers are candidates but must meet all the following criteria (to avoid extented field technique ): The largest radiologically suspicious positive pelvic node is less than 3 cm. Less than 3 radiologically suspicious positive nodes. No suspicious nodes located in the common iliac chain.
  6. Histologically-confirmed invasive uterine cervical carcinoma of subtypes squamous cell, adenocarcinoma or adenosquamous cell.
  7. Candidate for definitive chemoradiotherapy to be delivered with weekly cisplatin (Creatinine clearance more than 60 ml/min). Carboplatin AUC 2 is acceptable alternative if cisplatin is not tolerated (creatinine clearance 40:60 ml/min) .
  8. Brachytherapy candidate.
  9. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status up to 2 .

Exclusion criteria

  • 1.FIGO stage IA, IIIC2, IVA or IVB. 2.FIGO stage IIIC1 with node is equal or greater than 3 cm, common iliac node or greater than 2 radiologically suspicious nodes.

    3.Previous pelvic or abdominal radiotherapy. 4.Active inflammatory bowel disease. 5.Active connective tissue disorder (eg. scleroderma, systemic lupus erythematous).

    6.Patient unable to undergo MR scan 7.Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status equal to 3 or more.

    8.Creatinine clearance less than 40 ml/min.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

30 participants in 1 patient group

participants
Experimental group
Description:
30 patients will receive external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) 40 Gy / 16 fractions with additional 6:10 Gy boost on positive pelvic L.Ns if found either sequential or simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) (according to patient tolerability) with IMRT or VMAT technique followed by High-dose rate (HDR) Brachytherapy 28 Gy /4 fractions 7 Gy per fraction over 2 weeks
Treatment:
Radiation: moderate hypofractionation external beam radiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Manar Adel, master degree

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems