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About
The prognosis of patients with peritoneal metastasis from gastric cancer is extremely poor. Although chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy has achieved promising efficacy in the first-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer, patients with peritoneal metastasis benefit less from this regimen. Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) represents a novel treatment option, which maintains the high concentration of drugs in the abdominal cavity, and improve the anti-tumor efficacy of chemotherapy drugs through the thermo-thermal effect. The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of HIPEC and systemic chemotherapy combined with sintilimab in the first-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma with peritoneal metastasis.
Full description
To determine the efficacy and safety of HIPEC and systemic chemotherapy combined with sintilimab in the first-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis, patients will receive SOX regimen chemotherapy combined with sintilimab, once every three weeks. In the first cycle, HIPEC will be administrated, and HIPEC or intraperitoneal chemotherapy will be administrated in the second to third cycles according to the patient's condition. Then, another 3-cycle SOX regimen of systemic chemotherapy will be administrated. After the end of 6 cycles, patients will receive maintain treatment with a combination of S-1 and sintilimab until disease progression or intolerable toxicity.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Age 18-75 years.
Unresectable gastric/gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma diagnosed with peritoneal metastasis through laparoscopic exploration and pathological or cytological examination;
No previous antitumor treatment.
Agree to provide blood/tissue specimens.
The expected survival is more than 3 months.
ECOG PS≤1.
Adequate organ function including the following:
Strict contraception.
Patients must be able to understand and be willing to sign the written informed consent form. A signed informed consent form must be appropriately obtained prior to the conduct of any trial-specific procedure.
Exclusion criteria
Undergoing other drug clinical trials or having participated in any drug clinical trials one month before enrollment.
Active autoimmune disease or history of refractory autoimmune disease.
Receiving corticosteroids (> 10mg/d prednisone or equivalent dose of steroids) or other systematic immunosuppression therapies within 14 days before enrollment, excluding the following therapies: steroid hormone replacement therapy (≤10mg/d); local steroid therapy; and short-term, prophylactic steroid therapy for preventing allergies or nausea and vomiting.
Active or clinically significant cardiac disease:
Gastrointestinal perforation, obstruction, or uncontrollable diarrhea in the 6 months prior to enrollment;
Other tumors that have not been treated or exist at the same time, except carcinoma in situ of the cervix, treated basal cell carcinoma or superficial bladder tumor. If the tumor was cured and no evidence of disease was found for more than 3 years, the patient can be enrolled. All other tumors must be treated at least 3 years before enrollment.
Patients with pheochromocytoma.
Patients with a history of HIV infection or active hepatitis B/C.
Ongoing > level 2 infection.
Symptomatic brain metastasis or meningioma.
Unhealed wounds, ulcers or fractures.
Renal failure patients requiring blood or peritoneal dialysis.
Epileptic that needs medication.
History of organ transplantation (including corneal transplantation).
Allergic to research drugs or similar drugs, or suspected allergies.
Pregnant or lactating women.
Medical, psychological or social conditions can affect the recruitment of patients and evaluation of study results.
Other antitumor therapy (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery, immunotherapy, biotherapy, chemoembolization) other than investigator drugs. Palliative external irradiation for non-target lesions is allowed.
Previously used similar chemotherapy drugs or immune checkpoint inhibitors;
Major surgery 4 weeks before recruitment, open biopsy or major trauma surgery (excluding biliary stents, or percutaneous biliary drainage).
Treatment with antitumor Chinese herbal medicine.
Vaccination history 4 weeks prior to enrollment
The investigator believes that patients who are not suitable for the study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
69 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Hongfeng Gou, M.D; Pengfei Zhang, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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