Status and phase
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About
Rectal cancer patients who do not achieve a complete response to standard of care chemotherapy and radiation often require surgical resection as part of curative intent therapy. This study will evaluate whether additional "focal" radiation delivered internally (rectal brachytherapy) can provide complete responses and thus spare the requirement for surgery.
The main questions are whether: 1) rectal brachytherapy is safe in this clinical treatment paradigm and if 2) rectal brachytherapy improves organ preservation (no need for surgery).
The trial involves an additional MRI pelvis and sigmoidoscopy with marker placement to define high-risk residual disease for radiation planning. Subsequently, 3 outpatient brachytherapy treatments are given on a weekly basis. If a patient achieves a complete response to brachytherapy, standard of care non-operative surveillance visits are conducted with study visits aligned during the first two years following brachytherapy.
Full description
Rectal cancer patients with incomplete responses following standard of care chemotherapy and radiation are offered surgery as part of curative intent regimens. Similarly, patients with near-complete responses following initial therapy may require future salvage surgery given high local recurrence risk in the rectum. The goal of this study is to determine whether additional "internal" focal radiation delivered by rectal brachytherapy can provide a complete tumor response, such that patients can avoid surgical intervention. While rectal brachytherapy efficacy, technique, and safety has been demonstrated in previous studies conducted in Europe and Canada, it has not been tested to "boost" responses following standard of care chemotherapy/radiation in the United States.
Specifically, rectal brachytherapy treatment requires placement of a multichannel cylinder into the rectum following local analgesia and oral medication to improve procedure tolerability. A balloon on the cylinder is inflated to displace rectum uninvolved with tumor away from the internal high-dose radiation source that travels through the cylinder channels abutting the tumor. 21 Gy cumulative dose over 3 weekly treatments is administered to the high-risk rectal mucosa at a depth aligning to tumor thickness. The cylinder will be immobilized in the rectum for up to 3 hours during each of the 3 brachytherapy sessions, with radiation treatment being less than 10 minutes following completion of planning.
If complete response is achieved, surveillance visits will be conducted with an almost identical protocol to patients who achieve complete response following standard of care radiation/chemotherapy.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
History of ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease.
Pelvic radiotherapy given prior to rectal cancer external beam radiation.
Prior colorectal surgery in which anastomotic site is at or near HDR brachytherapy target.
o Prior local excision is not an exclusion criterion.
Uncontrolled intercurrent severe illness, including but not limited to, ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, uncontrolled hypertension, unstable angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmia, interstitial lung disease, serious chronic gastrointestinal conditions associated with diarrhea, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit compliance with study requirement, substantially increase risk of incurring AEs or compromise the ability of the patient to give written informed consent.
Life expectancy <3 years per provider discretion.
Concurrent administration of any cytotoxic chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or other any targeted oncologic agent that would impact rectal cancer is not allowed during study protocol.
If rectal cancer has been treated outside of standard total neoadjuvant therapy per NCCN guidelines, patients are ineligible for the trial. This includes if patients received external beam chemoradiation dose with prescription >56 Gy or short-course radiation to rectal mucosa prescription >30 Gy.
Pregnant women.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
44 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Robyn Swing
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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