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Invasive urothelial bladder cancer is a common malignancy causing 14,000 deaths annually in the United States. The primary objective of the feasibility/Phase I portion of the study is to establish the feasibility and safety of proton and the safety of IMRT for patients with pure or mixed variant urothelial carcinoma.
Full description
Invasive urothelial bladder cancer is a common malignancy causing 14,000 deaths annually in the United States. The primary objective of the feasibility/Phase I portion of the study is to establish the feasibility and safety of proton and the safety of IMRT. Safety will be based on acute toxicity. The primary objective of the phase II study is to generate estimates of the local failure rate for intermediate and high risk patients treated with either proton therapy or IMRT. The study, however, is not explicitly designed to compare outcomes of proton therapy and IMRT. Secondary objectives include further evaluation of acute and late toxicity, quality of life and estimation of overall survival.
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Inclusion criteria
Pure or mixed variant urothelial carcinoma o Allowable mixed variant subtypes include: squamous differentiation glandular differentiation nested pattern microcystic micropapillary lymphoepthelioma-like plasmacytoid and lymphoma-like sarcomatoid/carcinosarcoma giant cell trophoblastic differentiation clear cell lipid cell undifferentiated Radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection within the prior 48 weeks Pathologic T3 or higher stage disease, N0-2, M0 (AJCC, 7th Ed., Appendix C) No clinical evidence of residual or recurrent disease based on the following minimum diagnostic work-up within 8 weeks of a patients consent to participate.
The patient is a candidate for definitive external beam radiotherapy;
Exclusion criteria
Planned concurrent chemotherapy or other investigational drug to be given with radiation treatments o Prior chemotherapy or investigational drug for bladder cancer or a different cancer is allowed, provided that: The therapy was completed more than two weeks prior to the start of adjuvant pelvic radiation The participant has recovered to Grade 1 toxicity from agents previously administered Subtotal surgical resection with clinically evident residual disease by physical exam or axial imaging.
Prior or concurrent second invasive malignancy other than prostate and non-melanoma skin cancers, unless disease free for a minimum of five years. If a patient had a concurrent prostate cancer, then it must have been resected to negative margins.
Known severe, active co-morbidity, defined as follows:
o Any clinically significant unrelated systemic illness, medical condition, or other factor, which at the discretion of the Principal Investigators, would interfere in the safe and timely completion of study procedures, compromise the patients ability to tolerate the protocol therapy, or is likely to interfere with the study procedures or results.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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