ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

HIPEC Using High Intra-abdominal Pressure (HIPEC-IAP)

F

Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milano

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Pseudomyxoma Peritonei
Colorectal Cancer

Treatments

Other: High Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC
Other: Low Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC
Procedure: Cytoreductive surgery

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02949791
AIRC-2013-144445

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) is a promising therapy for peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) of various origins. Rather than the pharmacokinetic advantage, the uptake of chemotherapy by tumor tissue has been proposed as the best pharmacologic endpoint to assure the efficacy of HIPEC.

The primary endpoints of the present phase II randomized study are to test whether the increased intra abdominal pressure (IAP) during HIPEC could:

  • enhance the penetration of cisplatin into the residual neoplastic and normal tissues;
  • elicit changes on pharmacokinetic advantage of cisplatin.

Secondary endpoints are to evaluate the:

  • impact of high IAP on intraoperatory hemodynamic and respiratory parameters;
  • impact on short-term surgical outcomes (in hospital stay, morbidity, mortality).

Patients affected by PC from colorectal cancer or pseudomyxoma peritonei, submitted to complete cytoreduction (residual disease <2.5mm) would be eligible for the study. HIPEC will be performed using closed abdomen technique and cisplatin + mitomycin-C. Patients will be randomly assigned to HIPEC with low IAP (8-12 mmHg) or high IAP (18-22 mmHg). IAP will be measured using bladder catheter. High IAP will be obtained increasing the volume of perfusate.

Thirty-eight patients (19 in each study groups) will be enrolled in 30 months. The randomized groups will be stratified according to tumor type.

Full description

Patients affected by peritoneal metastasis from colorectal cancer or pseudomyxoma peritonei, submitted to complete cytoreduction (residual disease <2.5mm) would be eligible for the study. Residual and resectable tumour nodules of 0.5 to 1.0 cm will be left behind after the cytoreduction and they will be collected at the end of HIPEC for the purpose of this study. HIPEC will be performed using closed abdomen technique and cisplatin (42mg/L of perfusate) + mitomycin-C (3.3mg/m2/L of perfusate) for 60 minutes, at 42.5°C. Patients will be randomly assigned to HIPEC with low IAP (8-12 mmHg) or high IAP (18-22 mmHg). IAP will be measured using bladder catheter. Patients of high IAP group will be strictly monitored during the perfusion regarding hemodynamic/respiratory parameters. During the HIPEC, perfusate and blood samples will be collected every 10 minutes. Additional samples of arterial blood will be collected at 70, 90,120,180 and 240 minutes. After the completion of HIPEC residual tumor tissues, normal peritoneum and muscular fascia will be sampled for determination of cisplatin concentration.

Blood samples will be immediately centrifuged to separate plasma. An aliquot of plasma will be stored at -30°C for total platinum determination. Another aliquot will be ultrafiltered by centrifugation through a membrane with a cut-off 5000 Da for ultrafilterable platinum determination. The ultrafiltrate will be stored at -30°C until analysis.

Perfusate samples will follow the same procedure of blood samples. Tissues samples will be stored at -80°C until analysis. Platinum determination will be performed using an Inductive Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS) system by Thermo Scientific after preparing calibration curves with atomic platinum. Fluid samples simply dilute before ICP-MS examination while tissues will be desiccated, digested with a mixture of nitric acid and oxygen water, and evaporated to dryness prior to determination.

The investigators will compare the following outcomes between the study groups: tumor tissue concentration of cisplatin; the area under the curve (AUC) ratio of perfusate UF concentration of cisplatin times time to plasma UF concentration times time; in-hospital stay; systemic toxicity (NCI-CTCAE.v3), morbidity, and mortality.

Thirty eight patients (19 in each group) would be needed to detect an increase cisplatin concentration of 20 ng/mg of tumor tissue if patients are submitted to high-IAP during HIPEC, assuming alfa=0.05 and power=0.90 and standard deviation of 15 ng. Accrual time will be 30 months. The randomized groups will be stratified according to tumor type.

Enrollment

38 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Histological diagnosis of primary peritoneal carcinomatosis from colorectal origin or pseudomyxoma peritonei

  2. Patients submitted to complete cytoreduction with residual tumor <2.5 mm

  3. Patients at the end of cytoreduction should present the laboratorial and hemodynamic parameters set as followings:

    • Mean arterial pressure > 65 mmHg
    • Heart rate: < 100 bpm
    • Central venous pressure > 4 mmHg
    • Cardiac index > 2.2
    • Central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) > 72%, and
    • Haemoglobin > 8.0 gr/dl.
  4. Informed consent signed from the patient before the procedure.

Exclusion criteria

  • Severe hemodynamic and/or respiratory instability after the cytoreduction that precludes HIPEC.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

38 participants in 2 patient groups

Low Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC
Active Comparator group
Description:
Cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC with low intra-abdominal pressure
Treatment:
Procedure: Cytoreductive surgery
Other: Low Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC
High Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC
Experimental group
Description:
Cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC with high intra-abdominal pressure
Treatment:
Procedure: Cytoreductive surgery
Other: High Intra abdominal pressure HIPEC

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems