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Prospective Cohort Study of Pancreatic Cancer Patients Treated With Proton Beam Therapy

N

National Cancer Center (NCC)

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Pancreas Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04466189
NCC2018-0198

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pancreatic cancer is one of the few cancers whose survival rate has not improved significantly due to high local recurrence and systemic metastasis despite advances in diagnosis and treatment over the past 40 years. And currently pancreatic cancer is the fifth leading cause of cancer-related death in Korea. For this reason, various anti-cancer therapies and radiotherapy have been tested to improve survival.

Due to recent advances in radiotherapy technology, proton beam therapy (PBT) is a promising treatment for pancreatic cancer because it can reduce radiation dose from surrounding normal tissue while maximizing radiation to tumor tissues due to the distinct physical properties of proton beam. Low toxicity have been reported. In addition, retrospective analysis of pancreatic cancer patients (n=37) who performed proton therapy (PBT) from June 2013 to July 2016 showed promising therapeutic performance and less toxicity (survival rate, 19.3 months; Grade ≥ 3 Toxicity, 0%). In addition, gene polymorphisms of several genes (CD44, CD166, XAF1, MMP9, MUC1/4, SMAD7, SMAD4 (DPC), RRM1, ERCC1, HER2, etc.) in pancreatic cancer have been reported to be associated with recurrence and prognosis.

Full description

Pancreatic cancer is one of the few cancers whose survival rate has not improved significantly due to high local recurrence and systemic metastasis despite advances in diagnosis and treatment over the past 40 years. And currently pancreatic cancer is the fifth leading cause of cancer-related death in Korea. For this reason, various anti-cancer therapies and radiotherapy have been tested to improve survival.

Due to recent advances in radiotherapy technology, proton beam therapy (PBT) is a promising treatment for pancreatic cancer because it can reduce radiation dose from surrounding normal tissue while maximizing radiation to tumor tissues due to the distinct physical properties of proton beam. Low toxicity have been reported. In addition, retrospective analysis of pancreatic cancer patients (n=37) who performed proton therapy (PBT) from June 2013 to July 2016 showed promising therapeutic performance and less toxicity (survival rate, 19.3 months; Grade ≥ 3 Toxicity, 0%). In addition, gene polymorphisms of several genes (CD44, CD166, XAF1, MMP9, MUC1/4, SMAD7, SMAD4 (DPC), RRM1, ERCC1, HER2, etc.) in pancreatic cancer have been reported to be associated with recurrence and prognosis. Therefore, in this study, a prospective cohort of pancreatic cancer patients treated with proton beam therapy was established to analyze local control, survival, recurrence, toxicity, proton treatment plan information, gene expression information to analyze local control (LC), overall survival (OS), recurrence-free surival (RFS), and factors predicting treatment-related toxicity.

Enrollment

120 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

19+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pancreatic cancer patients scheduled to be proton beam therapy
  • Agreed to participate in this study

Exclusion criteria

-Disagreed to participate in this study

Trial design

120 participants in 1 patient group

Pancreatic Cancer Patients Treated With Proton Beam Therapy
Description:
Pancreatic Cancer Patients Treated With Proton Beam Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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