ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Metformin as Maintenance Therapy in Patients With Bone Sarcoma and High Risk of Relapse (Metform-Bone)

I

Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Osteosarcoma
Ewing Sarcoma

Treatments

Drug: Metformin Hydrochloride

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04758000
794/2020/Farm/IOR
2020-002579-37 (EudraCT Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Primitive bone sarcoma are rare tumors with low options of therapy for patient treatment.

  1. OSTEOSARCOMA VERY POOR RESPONDER COHORT. Necrosis on primitive localized osteosarcoma represents one of the principal prognostic factors. Nowadays, for localized osteosarcoma there is no maintenance therapy that have shown to be effective.

    In ISG-OS1 study in patients with necrosis < 60% had an event free survival (EFS) at 3 yrs of 20% (Ferrari S ) in a more recent analysis (Tsuda Y 2020) patients with a necrosis <60% had a 3 y EFS of 35% .

  2. OSTEOSARCOMA AND EWING'S SARCOMA AFTER FIRST RELAPSE Maintenance therapy after Complete Remission occurring after Ewing's sarcoma or osteosarcoma patients is not a standard rule.

These patients when free from disease, after first relapse, are more likely to face a second relapse. EFS at ONE YEAR after first relapse in osteosarcoma is shown in literature to be around 21% (Leary SE 2013) and 16% (Tirtei E 2017). The EFS at ONE YEAR after first relapse in Ewing's sarcoma is inferior to 20% (Barker 2005, Ferrari S 2015). A maintenance therapy with low toxicity in these high risk patients could be an option.

Metformin has been reported to a reduce the incidence of different type of cancer in diabetic patients. Metformin is well tolerated in diabetics an it is used in other conditions in non diabetic, as ovarian polycystic syndrome, metabolic syndrome and obesity. Metformin has been employed as chemoprevention related to its mechanism of action in breast cancer (NCT01101438 ) and in pediatric cancer together with chemotherapy (NCT01528046).

This study aim to explore the effectiveness of metformin (a low cost and well tolerated drug) as maintenance therapy in osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma patients at high risk of relapse.

Full description

MATERIALS & METHODS The study is divided in two groups

  1. Group 1-Localized osteosarcoma that have reported a post neoadjuvant chemotherapy primary tumor necrosis ≤ 60% Metformin will be administrated for 3 years maximum or until progression disease or if G3 or G4 toxicity is verified.

37 patients as total population are necessary to evaluate a 3 yrs increase of EFS from 35% ( historical data Tsuda Y ) to 60%,

  1. Group 2 Osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma patients in Complete Remission after the first relapse.Metformin will be administrated for 3 years or until progression .

The Event Free Survival of this second group will be calculated at 1 yr with the aim of an increase of EFS from 20%(historical data) to 45%

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS AND SAMPLE SIZE Sample size was calculated by the Expected Total Study Length minimization criteria to ensure a potency parameter of 80 % and point if there is a benefit in use Metformin compared to the historical control.

EFS will be estimated by Kaplan-Meier and the standard error will be used to calculate the interim analysis Z-factor as well as the final statistical analysis.

The final statistical analysis will be performed

  • Group 1 after 3 years after last patient enrollment
  • Group 2 at 1 year from the last patient enrollment : EFS at 1 year

OBJECTIVE

  1. Evaluate the event free survival (EFS) in osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma patients with high risk of relapse compared to the historical control.
  2. Evaluate Metformin's toxicity as maintenance therapy.

Enrollment

67 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

14+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Non metastatic osteosarcoma patients with necrosis ≤ 60 % in the end of post-operatory chemotherapy treatment (within 45 days.from the end of chemotherapy treatment).
  • Osteosarcoma or Ewing sarcoma patients free from the disease after first relapse (within 45 days.from the local surgery or 45 days from the end of chemotherapy treatment).
  • ≥ 14 years.
  • Patient should not be participating in other clinical study.
  • Patients should be able to swallow.
  • Screening up to 30 days from the end of chemotherapy treatment or relapse.
  • Start therapy up to 30 days from the screening.
  • Normal renal function (creatinine <1,3 mg/L, clearance creatinine ≥ 70 ml/min) end liver function (total serum bilirubina <1,2 mg/dL, except Gilbert syndrome patients), AST e ALT <1,8 times the normal range value

Exclusion criteria

  • Type B diabetic patient
  • Metastatic patients
  • Patients with acute metabolic acidosis (lactic acidosis, diabetic ketoacidosis).
  • Patients with renal insufficiency (GFR < 70 ml/min).
  • Patients with acute conditions that could cause kidney alterations as dehydration, severe infection and shock.
  • Patients with hepatic insufficiency as acute alcohol intoxication and alcoholism.
  • Patients with medical conditions that could cause tissue hypoxia: decompensated heart failure, respiratory failure, recent myocardial infarction, shock.
  • Patient who does not meet the inclusion criteria
  • Pregnant and breastfeeding patients, or young women at childbearing age who cannot exclude the state of pregnancy (possibly excluded by serum pregnancy test (BhCG test), in accordance with the recommendations of the CTFG.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

67 participants in 1 patient group

Metformin
Experimental group
Description:
Metformin will be administrated according with patients body mass index (BMI). The study is divided into 2 groups. * Group 1: Localized osteosarcoma that have presented a response ≤ 60% to the pre-operatory chemotherapy). * Group 2: Osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma patients with complete remission after the first relapse.
Treatment:
Drug: Metformin Hydrochloride

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Alessandra Longhi, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems