Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Desmoid tumors (DT) are rare tumors (2-4 cases/million/year) that originate from musculoaponeurotic structures. Although they are benign tumors with no metastatic potential, DT are considered as locally aggressive tumors, with local invasiveness and tissue destruction, leading to pain, and disability. Surgery remains the keystone of therapy, but is limited by the anatomical situation of extra-abdominal desmoid (EAD) tumors (chest wall, root members). In patients where surgery is considered, negative-margin resection (R0) is recommended, but this frequently results in cosmetic/functional impairment. Moreover, prognostic impact of R0 resections remains controversial. The outcome after initial surgery depends upon several factors such as age, tumor site, and tumor size as demonstrated by recent data from the French Sarcoma Group.
Alternative therapies to DT surgery for front-line or recurrence include NSAID's, anti-estrogens alone or in combination, -interferon, chemotherapy, targeted therapies or radiation therapy. All of these medical approaches however may fail to achieve long-term disease control and a number of patients suffer from irreducible pain, and disability from tumor volume.
Cryoablation is a promising technique that is suitable for patients experiencing extra-abdominal DT. The procedure is based on repeated cycles of freezing/passive thawing of the tumor, leading to cell death. The technique has many advantages, among which: the accurate control of iceball under real-time MRI or CT-scan monitoring (that is not possible with other techniques such as radiofrequency), the lack of mutilation, the possibility of repeating the procedure. The cryoablation procedure has proven to be beneficial for the treatment of various tumors (liver metastases, breast, kidney). Recently, percutaneous cryotherapy has been reported in the treatment of EAD tumors poorly suited to surgery, with promising results.
In the light of these encouraging data, it is believed that patients with extra-abdominal DT not amenable to surgery unless unacceptable surgical sequel and progressing after at least two lines of adequate medical therapy (tamoxifen, NSAID or chemotherapy), could benefit from the cryoablation procedure. Tumor cryotherapy-induced regression should allow symptoms relief, prolonged progression-free survival and a better quality of life.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Extra-abdominal desmoid tumor (confirmed by prior biopsy)
18 years of age or older
Tumor deemed accessible for cryoablation procedure by the operator in the investigator center
At least one measurable lesion (RECIST v1.1) using MRI (gadolinium injection mandatory)
90 % of destruction of the tumor achievable in one procedure of cryoablation with a possible second cryoablation procedure (if a complete treatment must be achieved).
Progressive disease under standard treatment (after at least two lines of adequate medical therapy, including tamoxifen, non-steroid anti-inflamatory or chemotherapy), with presence of functional symptoms and/or pain The definition of progressing tumors also involves patients with RECIST stable disease, but with persistent functional disability or tumor-induced pain not controlled by adequate pain medication including narcotics.
Unresectable tumor or tumor amenable only to mutilating surgery, deemed inappropriate, and discussed in multidisciplinary meeting (RCP)
ECOG performance status 0-2
Biological and hematological parameters:
Subject affiliated to social security
Signed informed consent
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal