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The goal of this clinical trial is to learn the efficacy and safety of intra-arterial cisplatin plus anti-angiogenesis inhibitor rh-endostatin (Endostar) combined with systematic chemotherapy in osteosarcoma. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Researchers will treat newly diagnosed osteosarcoma patients with systematic treatment and local treatment.
For systematic treatment, regular high-dose methotrexate and adriamycin will be administered intravenously.
For local treatment, rh-endostatin was administered intra-arterially with dosage of 150 mg for a 6-h continuous infusion; then cisplatin was administered intra-arterially at 120 mg/m2 as a 6-h continuous infusion.
Local treatment is conducted by insertion of a catheter percutaneously using the Seldinger technique through the brachial or femoral artery under local anesthesia.
Participants will:
• Receive local combined with systematic treatment once every 2-3 weeks for 2-4 cycles before surgery.
Full description
Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common bone cancer in children and young adolescents. Despite the emergence of new therapeutic modalities such as targeted therapy and immunotherapy, chemotherapy remains the standard treatment. The current standard treatment for osteosarcoma is the preoperative chemotherapy, surgery and postoperative chemotherapy. Preoperative chemotherapy (or neoadjuvant chemotherapy) and neoadjuvant chemotherapeutic agents include cisplatin, adriamycin, methotrexate. The use of preoperative chemotherapy has increased the 5-year survival rate from 20% to 60%-70%. Over the past 40 years, limited progress has been made in improving survival outcomes in patients with OS.
Transcatheter arterial infusion (TAI) is the direct infusion of drugs in the tumor blood supply artery, which can overcome the physiological barrier that some intravenous drug can not pass, thus significantly increasing the local drug concentration in the tumor and improving the therapeutic efficacy. Studies have shown that the combination of intravenous doxorubicin and intra-arterial cisplatin infusion before surgery resulted in a favorable histological response in 87% of enrolled patients, with a 10-year survival rate of 93% and an event-free survival rate of 86%.
Recombinant endostatin, an anti-angiogenic drug approved by the National Medical Products Administration of China in 2005 for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer. In preclinical studies, synergistic antitumor efficacy was observed in an osteosarcoma mouse model with the addition of rh-endostatin to doxorubicin. In the clinical study of osteosarcoma, after comparing 58 patients with stage IIB osteosarcoma treated with chemotherapy combined with endostatin and 272 patients treated with chemotherapy alone, results show that the 5-year DMFS (distant metastasis-free survival) of the control group (61%) was significantly lower than that of the rh-endostatin group (79%) (P = 0.013). The 5-year OS of the control group (74%) was significantly lower than that of the rh-endostatin treatment group (87%) (P = 0.029). These results suggest that endostatin combined with chemotherapy for osteosarcoma significantly improves distant metastasis-free survival, with tolerable adverse effects, and is worthy of further clinical investigation.
Therefore, the investigators propose that arterial infusion of endostatin and cisplatin combined with systematic therapy might improve the treatment efficacy in preoperative course.
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Hong-Tao Li, Dr.; Yong-Gang Wang, Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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