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Patients with advanced lung cancer are a high-risk population for cancer-related anorexia-cachexia syndrome (CACS). Meanwhile, the adverse reactions of chemotherapy and immunotherapy potentially exacerbate the occurrence and progression of CACS. CACS seriously affects the quality of life of patients with advanced lung cancer, significantly shortens the overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), forming a vicious cycle. A number of previous studies have shown that combined supportive therapies such as megestrol acetate during chemotherapy or concurrent chemoradiotherapy for advanced tumor patients is a clinically meaningful and feasible treatment model in clinical practice. However, the efficacy and optimal treatment timing of combination with current first-line immunochemotherapy regimens remain unclear. Although mechanistic studies have shown that anti-cachexia therapy may synergistically enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy, relevant clinical research evidence is lacking.
Therefore, this study hypothesizes that the combination of first-line immunochemotherapy regimen and nano-crystalline megestrol acetate can improve the clinical benefits of patients with advanced lung cancer. It is planned to enroll patients with advanced lung cancer who present with anorexia-cachexia, and administer nano-crystalline megestrol acetate intervention (nano-crystalline megestrol acetate or its placebo control) during first-line immunochemotherapy. The changes in body weight relative to the baseline, as well as the impact on survival benefits and quality of life of patients, will be detected. In China, megestrol acetate is mainly available in two dosage forms: oral suspension and dispersible tablets. The oral suspension of megestrol acetate adopts nano-crystal technology (referred to as nano-crystalline megestrol acetate), which reduces the particle size of megestrol acetate and improves bioavailability. Previous randomized controlled studies have shown that it is superior to non-nano-crystal dosage forms in improving body weight.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients must meet all the following criteria to be eligible for study enrollment:
Inclusion criteria for advanced lung cancer:
Criteria for pre-cachexia or cachexia stage:
Pre-cachexia diagnostic criteria (all three must be met):
Unintentional weight loss ≤5% in the past 6 months;
② Systemic inflammation (CRP >5 mg/L);
③ Decreased appetite (FAACT-A/CS 12 score ≤37).
Fearon diagnostic criteria for cachexia stage (any one of the following combined with decreased appetite [FAACT-A/CS 12 score ≤37] or systemic inflammation [CRP >5 mg/L]):
General inclusion requirements:
Good compliance and signed informed consent form.
Age 18-75 years, regardless of gender.
ECOG performance status 0-2.
Life expectancy ≥6 months.
Good organ function:
• Hematological: Neutrophils ≥1.5×10⁹/L, hemoglobin ≥9 g/dL, platelets ≥100×10⁹/L.
• Liver function: Bilirubin ≤1.5×ULN (patients with known Gilbert disease and serum bilirubin ≤3×ULN are eligible); AST and ALT ≤2.5×ULN (if liver metastasis is present, AST and ALT ≤5×ULN); alkaline phosphatase ≤3×ULN (if liver or bone metastasis is present, ALP ≤5×ULN); albumin ≥3 g/dL.
Female patients of childbearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test within 3 days before the first drug administration (if the urine test is inconclusive, a serum test is required, with the serum result as the standard). If a female patient of childbearing potential has sexual activity with an unsterilized male partner, she must use an acceptable contraceptive method from screening and agree to continue contraception for 120 days after the last administration of the study drug. Whether to discontinue contraception after this period should be discussed with the investigator. Male patients who are not sterilized and have sexual activity with female partners of childbearing potential must use effective contraception from screening to 120 days after the last administration. Whether to discontinue contraception after this period should be discussed with the investigator.
Exclusion criteria
(1) Cancer-specific exclusion criteria:
a) Active or untreated CNS metastases (e.g., brain or leptomeningeal metastases) confirmed by CT or magnetic resonance (MRI) evaluation during screening and prior imaging. Patients who have received treatment for brain or leptomeningeal metastases, have been stable for ≥2 months, and have discontinued systemic hormonal therapy (>10 mg/d prednisone or equivalent) >4 weeks before randomization may participate.
b) Uncontrolled tumor-related pain. c) Thromboembolic disease, ascites, or lower limb edema within the past 6 months.
d) History of malignant tumors other than lung cancer within 5 years before randomization, except for malignancies with negligible risk of metastasis or death [e.g., expected 5-year overall survival rate >90%] and expected to be cured after treatment, such as appropriately treated cervical in situ carcinoma, basal or squamous cell skin cancer, localized prostate cancer treated with radical surgery, and ductal carcinoma in situ treated with radical surgery.
e) Unresolved toxicity from prior antitumor therapy, defined as failure to recover to NCI CTCAE v5.0 grade 0 or 1 (except alopecia) or to the levels specified in the inclusion/exclusion criteria.
(2) General medical exclusion criteria:
Women who are pregnant, lactating, or planning to become pregnant during the study.
Patients with hepatitis B (known HBsAg-positive and HBV DNA ≥1000 cps/ml or 200 IU/ml or ≥ the upper limit of normal at each study center) or hepatitis C:
● For patients with a history of HBV infection, HBV DNA testing must be performed, and they are eligible only if HBV DNA is negative (HBV DNA <1000 cps/ml or 200 IU/ml or below the upper limit of normal).
Patients with positive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) test results.
Receipt of major surgery (excluding diagnostic surgery) within 28 days before randomization, or expected to undergo major surgery during the study.
Significant cardiovascular diseases, such as heart disease defined by the New York Heart Association (class II or higher), myocardial infarction within 3 months before randomization, unstable arrhythmia, unstable angina, cerebrovascular accident, or transient ischemic attack. Patients with known coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure not meeting the above criteria, or left ventricular ejection fraction <50% must receive the optimal stable treatment regimen as determined by their attending physician, with consultation from a cardiologist if necessary.
Severe infection within 4 weeks before the first drug administration, including but not limited to complications requiring hospitalization, sepsis, or severe pneumonia; active infection requiring systemic anti-infective therapy within 2 weeks before the first drug administration (excluding antiviral therapy for hepatitis B or C).
(3) Medication-related exclusion criteria:
Primary purpose
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116 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
xiaohong xie
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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