Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is one of the ten leading cancers in Taiwanese male. The prognosis is poor with a five-year overall survival rate of 10 to 30 %. Randomized clinical trials have demonstrated that trimodality therapy (TMT), consisted of neoadjuvant concurrent chemoradiation (CCRT) and radical esophagectomy, improves the overall survival for patients with locally advanced disease. Despite of the advancement, the outcome remained unsatisfactory with the median progression-free survival around 20 to 25 months and median overall survival around 30 months. It is know that the most important prognostic factor is whether a pathological complete response can be achieved after neoadjuvant CCRT. However, the use of new generation chemotherapeutic agent taxanes and epidermal growth factor inhibitors (such as Cetuximab) failed to significantly improve prognosis comparing to the standard platinum-fluorouracil (PF) regimen. As a consequence, it is mandatory to develop new chemotherapeutic regimen for CCRT.
In previous prospective studies, investigators used proximal ligation assay technology to identify serum VEGF-A in correlation with the pathological response and prognosis for patients receiving neoadjuvant CCRT plus radical esophagectomy for locally advanced ESCC. Other investigators also showed high VEGF expression correlating to poor outcome. Therefore, investigators generate the hypothesis that adding vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) monoclonal antibody, Bevacizumab, to standard neoadjuvant CCRT may improve outcome for patients with ESCC. Meanwhile, several prospective clinical studies have shown the feasibility, safety, and activity of adding Bevacizumab to chemotherapy, CCRT, or combined modality therapy including surgery, either in head and neck cancer, esophageal cancer, or esophagogastric junction adenocarcinoma. However, its efficacy should be further investigated in larger prospective trials and little is known about the activity and toxicity of Bevacizumab in ESCC due to small number of reported cases. In the present clinical trial, investigators plan to investigate whether incorporation of Bevacizumab into standard neoadjuvant PF-CCRT will improve treatment response and increase pathological complete response rate. Investigators will also evaluate associated biomarkers in relation to prognosis. By the present research, investigators expect to develop a new TMT regimen for this poor prognostic disease.
Full description
This study is a randomized trial to compare the outcomes between patients receiving neoadjuvant PF-CCRT plus Bevacizumab (BPF-CCRT) or PF-CCRT alone. Investigators design to enrol 6 patients in the run-in phase, and 44 patients in the randomized phase (22 patients in each group) to develop the preliminary evidence for using Bevacizumab in ESCC.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria
To be eligible for inclusion, patients must fulfill the following criteria:
Histologically proved squamous cell carcinoma of esophagus
Locoregional advanced stage III disease, which are defined by Tumor, Nodes, Metastases (TNM) system of American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Cancer Staging System (7th edition) in 2010, fulfilling one of the following criteria:
Medical fit for curative surgery
Age ≥ 20 years
Karnofsky Performance Status ≥ 60%
Adequate bone marrow reserves within 2 weeks prior to registration, defined as:
Adequate liver function reserves within 2 weeks prior to registration, defined as:
Adequate renal function within 2 weeks prior to registration: Creatinine ≤1.5 mg/dL
International normalized ratio (INR) ≤ 1.5 and activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) ≤ 1.5 X ULN within 2 weeks prior to registration
Women of childbearing potential and male participants must practice adequate contraception
Patients must be able to comply with the study protocol and follow-up schedules and provide study-specific informed consent
Exclusion criteria Patients fulfill any of the following criteria will be excluded from this trial
Prior radiotherapy to head and neck, chest, or abdomen
Tumor invasion to adjacent structures (T4 lesion)
Presence of distant metastasis
Adenocarcinoma of gastroesophageal junction.
Synchronously or metachronously diagnosed squamous cell carcinoma of aerodigestive way, other than oesophageal cancer
Prior invasive malignancy
Severe, active comorbidities which, in the judgment of the investigator, would make the patient inappropriate for entry into this study or interfere significantly with the proper assessment of safety and adverse events of the protocol, or limit compliance with study requirements, defined as follows:
On full-dose anticoagulants (e.g., Warfarin or low molecular weight heparin) or medications known to inhibit platelet function (e.g. aspirin, dipyramidole, ticlopidine, clopidogrel, cilostazol, or NSAIDs)
Prior history of hypertensive crisis or blood pressure at baseline > 150/100 mmHg
Hepatic insufficiency resulting in coagulation defects
History of a non-healing wound, ulcer, or bone fracture within 90 days (3 months) prior to registration
Any hemorrhage/bleeding event CTCAE, ver. 4 grade 3 or greater within 30 days prior to registration
Gross hemoptysis or hematemesis (defined as bright red blood of 1 teaspoon or more or frank clots within minimal or no phlegm per coughing episode) within 4 weeks prior to registration; patients with incidental blood mixed with phlegm are not excluded.
Major surgical procedure or significant traumatic injury within 28 days prior to registration (with the exception of jejunostomy or port-A insertion)
Women of childbearing potential and male participants who are sexually active and not willing/able to use medically acceptable forms of contraception; this exclusion is necessary because the radiation treatment involved in this study may be significantly teratogenic
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Feng-Ming Hsu; Jason Chia-Hsien Cheng
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal