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About
The purpose of this study is to identify predictive molecular markers of response to continuous daily sunitinib at dose of 37.5 mg used in patients with poorly-differentiated Advanced/Inoperable NEURO-Endocrine Tumors.
Hypothesis:
Full description
Neuroendocrine tumors (NET) are rare malignancies (1-2% of digestive cancers); and there is, in recent years, a slow but steady increase in their incidence. Despite the joint efforts of several research groups, which led to the new WHO classification (2002), the natural history of the disease remains heterogene and the resistance to conventional cytotoxic treatment remains the common denominator of these tumors.
Indeed, the prognosis of patients with metastatic disease remains poor despite numerous treatments (including: IFN, DTIC, 5-FU, doxorubicin, somatostatin analogues, etc.).
None of which showed a benefit in terms of survival. The main therapeutic objective is still to get a palliative effect on the symptoms and / or limit a few months tumor progression.
There are many publications showing that angiogenesis is one of the major mechanisms of tumor progression in TNE. But the multiple signaling pathways involved, the existence of alternative routes and their relationship to apoptosis inducing molecules remain unknown. Sunitinib is a new molecule in the family of tyrosine kinase inhibitors targeting multiple receptors which VEGFR, KIT, PDGF-R, FLT3 and RET. Since 2006 year, Sunitinib has been approved to treat advanced kidney cancer also called advanced renal cell carcinoma (a typically chemoresistant disease for which there was no active treatment available).
Many retrospective studies in patients showing that the TNE overexpress one or more targets of sunitinib. In Phase I trial, an antitumor activity has been identified in neuroendocrine tumors. In a phase II trial including 100 patients with well-differentiated TNE and carcinoids, sunitinib is associated with a response rate of 10%, and 82% of clinical benefit in the form of tumor stability.
Currently, an international randomised phase III trial initiated in well differentiated forms, but no studies are underway for poorly-differentiated TNE.
All of this suggests that sunitinib could represent an important therapeutic option for moderate, or poorly differentiated inoperable TNE and needs to be explored in this pathology by identifying predictive biomarkers of response.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Digestive NET histopathologically proven, poorly-differentiated
Inoperable/advanced NET (Tumor relapse inoperable or metastatic with no surgical indication).
Tumor samples should be made available for analysis(diagnostic biopsy, surgical specimen)
measurable disease defined by at least one lesion wich can be measured by at least one dimension :
Performance status WHO ≤ 2.
Adequate organ function :
the selected women must be post-menopausal woman or surgically castrated or have to accept an effective contraception for the duration of the treatment and 3 month after.Women who are old enough to procreate must have a negative pregnancy test within the 72 hours of the beginning of the treatment.They must not be pregnant or to breastfeed.the selected men and theirs partners must be sterile or use an effective contraception for the duration of the treatment and 3 month after.
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33 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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