Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study will determine which of the two following treatment regimens provides greater benefit to patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis (gastrointestinal cancer that has spread throughout the abdomen):
Patients 18 years of age and older with peritoneal carcinomatosis may be eligible for this study. Candidates are screened with a medical history, physical examination, and blood tests; chest X-ray and computed tomography (CT) scans; review of pathology slides; electrocardiogram (EKG), bone scan, and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as needed; and laparotomy. Laparatomy is a surgical procedure in which an incision is made in the abdomen to look at the amount and location of tumors in the abdominal cavity. Patients whose surgery reveals that the tumors cannot be removed are taken off study. Those eligible for the study have their tumors removed during this screening laparotomy as part of the study procedure, as follows:
All participants undergo laparotomy and removal of as much tumor as possible, as described above. Patients are then randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups:
All patients undergo repeat imaging tests six weeks after surgery and at the conclusion of the intravenous (IV) chemotherapy. They return for a physical examination and CT scans every three months for the first year, every four months for the next two years, and then every six months for up to five years after treatment. They are also asked to complete quality of life questionnaires before and after surgery, at the completion of chemotherapy, and at every follow-up visit.
Full description
Patients with low-grade gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma and peritoneal carcinomatosis will undergo laparotomy and tumor debulking. Patients will be randomized at completion of tumor debulking to receive continuous hyperthermic peritoneal perfusion (HIPEC,formerly CHPP) with 250 mg/m^2 cisplatin and an intraperitoneal dwell of 5-fluorouracil 800 mg/m^2 and paclitaxel 125 mg/m^2 once between postoperative day 7 and 12. All patients will receive systemic oxaliplatin, leucovorin and infusional 5-FU, every other week of every four weeks starting 4 to 6 weeks after operation and continuing for four cycles. The major endpoint is time to intraperitoneal tumor progression and survival in patients stratified based on history of previous treatment with systemic chemotherapy (yes vs. no), history of prior debulking surgery; and ability to optimally vs. suboptimally debulk intraperitoneal tumor burden.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Patients will be excluded if they have concomitant medical problems that would place them at unacceptable risk for a major surgical procedure.
Patients who have a neurological toxicity of Grade 3 or greater will be excluded because of the potential neurotoxicity associated with platinum and paclitaxel therapy.
Patients will be ineligible if they have a serum creatinine of greater than 1.5 mg/dL unless the measured creatinine clearance is greater than 60mL/min/1.73m^2.
Patients will be ineligible if platelets are less than 75, 000/mm^3.
Patients who have failed previous intraperitoneal chemotherapy will be ineligible.
Pregnant women or women who are breast-feeding will be ineligible.
Patients less than 30 kg will be ineligible.
Patients who have undergone two or more operative procedures to debulk disease, have received 2 or more regimens of systemic chemotherapy, or any previous continuous hyperthermic peritoneal perfusion (CHPP) therapy will be excluded from study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal