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High grade gliomas, particularly glioblastoma, are among the most aggressive brain tumors and are associated with poor outcomes despite standard treatment. Many patients, especially older adults or those with poor general health, are not suitable for surgery and have a life expectancy of less than 12 months. Current standard includes a shortened course of radiotherapy (over 3 weeks) combined with chemotherapy using temozolomide (TMZ), which offers limited survival benefits. This study aims to explore whether delivering radiotherapy in a shorter duration (1 or 2 weeks) at a higher dose, guided by advanced imaging with a PET scan, can improve survival in this group of patients. PET scans help identify the most active parts of the tumor, which aids in targeting of these areas more precisely, potentially improving outcomes while reducing harm to healthy brain tissue. This study will randomly assign 116 eligible patients into two groups:
The primary goal is to compare overall survival at one year between the two groups. The study will also assess how the disease progresses, side effects of treatment, and the impact on patients' quality of life. The study will be conducted over a total period of 6 years, including 4 years for patient enrolment and 2 years of follow-up. Participation in the study is entirely voluntary, and all patients will undergo an informed consent process. The study has been designed to follow all applicable ethical and regulatory guidelines. The results may help establish a more effective and convenient treatment option for patients with aggressive brain tumors and poor prognosis.
Full description
Introduction:
Glioblastoma Multiforme(GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain tumor which is uniformly fatal with dismal long term survival rates despite aggressive multimodality therapy. A large proportion of the patients are elderly, presenting at over 65 years of age and their treatment is associated with even more inferior outcomes. Treatment of such elderly patients with typical normo-fractionated Radiotherapy (RT) {1.8-2Gy per fractionation} over 6-6.5 weeks leads to unnecessary protraction of treatment, unduly encumbering patients and their caregivers. Randomised trials and subsequent meta-analyses have shown that hypo-fractionated RT ( typically delivered over 2 -3 weeks ) achieves similar survival as longer 6 week schedules in elderly patients in poor general condition. Addition of Temozolomide based chemotherapy was subsequently shown to improve survival and in current practice hypo-ractionated short course RT(hypo-RT) with TMZ represents the most optimal management of GBM in the elderly achieving a median survival in the vicinity of 6-9 months. Similar survival has been reported in institutional series in poor prognosis High Grade Glioma. Cumulatively, all the data serve as a relatively homogenous point for providing benchmark outcomes which may be used to improve survival by means of treatment intensification and optimisation of the HypoRT -TMZ backbone in this setting.
One of the most tangible ways in which outcomes can be improved pertains to the usage of a higher cumulative RT dose. Retrospective institutional data suggest that normo-fractionated schedules (59.4Gy/33#) delivered in fit elderly individuals are associated with survival benefit. Concurrent data shows that similar increase in median survival to 14-15 months is achievable by the usage of 3 week hypofractionated regimens which are iso-effective to the Stupp regimen. Further safe reduction to a 2 week schedule has been shown in a recent trial using proton therapy and Positron Emission Tomography (PET) guided sub-volume dose escalation. The reduction of dose to the normal brain has shown to be more pragmatically achievable in a recent trial incorporating reduced margins (5mm as opposed to 1.5 -2 cm) for microscopic disease and photon based fractionated radiosurgery which achieved a median survival of 14.8 months with no compromised survival due to marginal recurrences. Overall there is a need for a pragmatic trial incorporating an abbreviated schedule of photon based hypo-fractionated RT (5 fractions/10 fractions) in poor prognosis High Grade Glioma (HGG) using reduced margins and PET based biological sub-volume boosting to deliver adequate doses to the gross tumor and minimise surrounding normal brain RT doses to improve median benchmark survival to 14-15 months as compared to the prevailing standard of care (40Gy/15# with temozolomide). The current trial plans to address this knowledge gap.
Primary Endpoint:
The primary endpoint will be the Overall Survival (OS) at 1 year. Overall Survival will be defined as the time elapsed from the date of randomization to date of death due to any cause.
Secondary Endpoint:
Study Design:
The study will be a prospective, open-label2-arm Phase 2 randomized controlled trial with a superiority design. The standard arm will comprise of 3 week hypo-fractionated RT(40Gy/15#).The test arms will comprise of dose escalated hypo-fractionated RT (5 fractions/10 fractions). The usage of TMZ will be standard across both arms.
Study setting: The study will be conducted in the department of Radiation Oncology, Neuro Oncology Disease management group
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108 participants in 2 patient groups
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Abhishek Chatterjee, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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