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Cancer cachexia syndrome (CCS) is frequent, causing high morbidity and mortality in affected ones. The mechanism is catabolism caused by the tumour. CRP is a surrogate marker for catabolism. There are no effective treatment options against CCS. Lenalidomide, a derivate of thalidomide, is an immunomodulatory drug (IMiD®). One of its' main effect is a decrease in inflammatory cytokines. As CCS treatment, thalidomide has shown in a randomized controlled trial to stabilize lean body mass. The effect of lenalidomide in solid tumour patients was negligible although, there might be a decrease in tumour progression. However, even if lenalidomide may be uninteresting as an anticancer treatment it might affect CCS dynamics. Respective data are currently lacking. Therefore, a dose level where an anticancer effect could be expected was chosen (group A). Relevant anti-inflammatory effect may occur below the commonly used doses to achieve tumour control, which is expected to be the main anti-cachexia effect. Therefore, a second CRP-response guided treatment arm (group B) was chosen.
Hypothesis: To test whether the response rate under new standard basic cachexia management will be at the estimated 5% and with lenalidomide (either fixed dose or CRP-guided dose) in addition to basic cachexia management at least 25%.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of lenalidomide on lean body mass and handgrip strength in advanced solid tumour patients with inflammatory CCS.
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Inclusion criteria
Age: Patients must be older than 18 years of age.
Tumour situation: Patients with any type of advanced (defined as locally recurrent or metastatic), incurable solid tumour.
Cachexia: Presence of CCS, defined as involuntary loss of weight of ≥2% in 2 months or ≥5% in 6 months, which is ongoing in the last 4 weeks, and lack of fluid retention.
Inflammation: CRP must be ≥ 30mg/l in the absence of any other more likely cause of increased CRP like an infection or an autoimmune disorder.
No simple starvation: Patients must be able to eat, defined as no severe structural barriers in the upper gastrointestinal tract and no bowel obstruction.
Life expectancy, physical performance: Patient must have an expected life expectancy > 3 months according to palliative performance (Pap) score and a WHO performance status (PS) ≤ 2.
No anti-cachexia or appetite-stimulating medications: Patients are not allowed to have corticosteroids unless for maximum 2 days per week for chemotherapy, progestin therapy, Cyclooxigenase-2 inhibitor (COX-2 inhibitor), and anabolic drugs 28 days before start of trial medication until study conclusion. Prokinetic medication, NSAR, paracetamol and novamin sulphate are allowed, if given in a fixed dose for two weeks before visit 1, and expected to be given during the whole trial period.
Laboratory test results: Granulocyte count ≥ 1.5 x 109/L, platelet count ≥ 100 x 109/L, serum creatinine ≤ 2.0 mg/dL (177 μmol/L), creatinine clearance ClCr ≥ 50ml/min, total bilirubin ≤1.5 mg/dL (25μmol/L), and AST (SGOT)/ ALT (SGPT) ≤2 x ULN or if hepatic metastases are present ≤ 5 x ULN.
No other trial: Patient is not participating any other clinical intervention 28 days before start of trial medication until study conclusion.
Women of childbearing potential (see Annex 1): A negative pregnancy test & effective contraception are mandatory in child-bearing age.
Cognition: Presence of a normal level of consciousness (mandatory is a normal abbreviated screening mini-mental test or a common mini-mental ≥ 27/30; in elderly patients age ≥ 65 years or patients with low education a mini mental status of ≥25/30 points will be considered adequate).
Logistics: The patient is able to comply with the study schedule and procedures (including fasting for blood draws on certain visits)
Consent: The patient has voluntarily signed and dated the informed consent (IC), approved by the Ethics Committee (EC), prior to any study-specific procedures.
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200 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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