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Proton Beam Therapy in the Treatment of Esophageal Cancer

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The Washington University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Esophagus Cancer
Cancer of the Esophagus
Esophageal Cancer

Treatments

Radiation: Proton beam therapy
Other: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03482791
201803092

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators plan to include both operable and inoperable patients with esophagus cancer in this prospective trial. Since both proton and photon treatments are biologically equivalent, the investigators do not expect a difference in tumor control compared to intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). The investigators have a prospective experience of physician-reported toxicity and patient outcome using IMRT for patients with inoperable esophagus cancer that will serve as a comparison group. For the resectable patients receiving trimodality therapy (chemoradiation followed by surgery), the investigators will carefully track toxicity and patient outcomes prospectively. The central hypothesis is that the biologic efficacy for tumor control should be similar between protons and photons, and therefore survival measures should be similar between the two groups, but that the main difference lies in the total severe toxicities experienced by the patients undergoing therapy.

Enrollment

22 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Histologically or cytologically documented adenocarcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma of the cervical or thoracic esophagus or gastroesophageal junction or cardia of stomach.

  • Staged by PET/CT and esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) or endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) OR CT w/contrast and EGD to have stage II or III disease per AJCC 7th edition guidelines

  • Prior endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) with a diagnosis of stage II or III esophageal cancer (AJCC 7th edition) is eligible, irrespective of margin status.

  • Induction chemotherapy prior to concurrent chemoradiation is allowed.

  • Prior thoracic radiation is allowable if degree of overlap with the esophageal radiotherapy treatment is deemed to be safe by the treating radiation oncologist.

  • At least 18 years of age.

  • ECOG performance status < 2

  • Normal bone marrow and organ function as defined below:

    • WBC > 2,500/mcL
    • Platelets > 75,000/mcl
    • Total bilirubin < 1.5 x institutional upper limit of normal (IULN)
    • AST(SGOT)/ALT(SGPT) < 3.0 x IULN
    • Creatinine < 1.5 x IULN OR Creatinine clearance > 50 mL/min/1.73 m2 for patients with creatinine levels above institutional normal
  • Women of childbearing potential and men must agree to use adequate contraception (hormonal or barrier method of birth control, abstinence) prior to study entry and for the duration of study participation. Should a woman become pregnant or suspect she is pregnant while participating in this study, she must inform her treating physician immediately.

  • Ability to understand and willingness to sign an IRB approved written informed consent document.

  • English speaker.

  • Financial coverage for proton therapy.

Exclusion criteria

  • Planned treatment with radiation therapy alone without concurrent chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone.
  • Previous or concomitant cancers within the past 3 years other than curatively treated carcinoma in situ of the cervix, basal cell carcinoma of the skin, curative treatment for transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder, and low risk prostate cancer. Except for prostate cancer (which can be observed if low risk), other cancers listed must have been treated in the past 3 years without evidence of recurrence at the time of registration.
  • Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmia not controlled by pacer device, myocardial infarction within 3 months of registration, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit compliance with study requirements
  • Pregnant and/or breastfeeding. Patient must have a negative pregnancy test within 7 days of the start of treatment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

22 participants in 2 patient groups

Arm 1: Resectable (proton beam therapy)
Experimental group
Description:
* Proton beam therapy: total dose of 50 or 50.4 Gy * Standard of care chemotherapy - the clinical trial doesn't dictate anything about the chemotherapy given, it is the treating physician's decision * Surgery should ideally be performed no later than 8 to 10 weeks after completing chemoradiation * Patient-reported outcome measures (PROs) performed at several time points
Treatment:
Other: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures
Radiation: Proton beam therapy
Arm 2: Unresectable (proton beam therapy)
Experimental group
Description:
* Proton beam therapy: total dose of 59.4 or 60 Gy * Standard of care chemotherapy - the clinical trial doesn't dictate anything about the chemotherapy given, it is the treating physician's decision * Patient-reported outcome measures (PROs) performed at several time points
Treatment:
Other: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures
Radiation: Proton beam therapy

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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