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About
RATIONALE: Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to kill tumor cells. Specialized radiation therapy that delivers a high dose of radiation directly to the tumor may kill more tumor cells and cause less damage to normal tissue. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as cisplatin, mitomycin C, and fluorouracil, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Giving radiation therapy together with cisplatin may kill more tumor cells.
PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well radiation therapy given together with chemotherapy works in treating patients with stage I bladder cancer.
Full description
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3 months for 1 year, every 4 months for 1 year, every 6 months for 3 years, and annually thereafter until termination of the study.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria
Pathologically proven diagnosis of carcinoma of the bladder within 105 days prior to registration.
• Operable patients whose initial tumor is a primary high grade urothelial carcinoma of the bladder exhibiting histologic evidence of invasion into the lamina propria (disease clinical stage T1) or a high grade stage Ta urothelial carcinoma without hydronephrosis; patients who have involvement of the prostatic urethra with urothelial carcinoma and have no evidence of stromal invasion of the prostate remain eligible. If the patient's initial tumor was a high grade stage Ta urothelial carcinoma then his/her recurrent tumor must be a high grade stage T1 urothelial carcinoma to be eligible.
Patients must have a high grade urothelial carcinoma stage Ta or T1 that has recurred within 540 days after completion of the initial treatment [TURBT and intravesical Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) immunotherapy] or on initial presentation with a T1 high grade tumor, the participating urologist judged BCG therapy is contraindicated or unsuitable because the patient is found to be intolerant of BCG therapy or because this patient may be immuno-compromised in ways other than that mentioned in Exclusion Criteria 2.8 or because the patient refuses BCG therapy.
With the presentations as described in Section 2, the participating urologist judges that the standard next therapy, based on present urologic guidelines for this patient, is radical cystectomy.
If radiologic evaluation of a lymph node is interpreted as "positive", this must be evaluated further either by lymphadenectomy or by percutaneous needle biopsy. Patients with histologically or cytologically confirmed node metastases will not be eligible.
Patients must have an adequately functioning bladder as judged by the participating urologist and radiation oncologist and have undergone a re-staging TURBT by the participating urologist that showed (or was present in the outside pathology specimen) a high grade stage Ta or T1 tumor with uninvolved muscularis propria in the specimen and, if on prostatic urethral biopsy mucosal carcinoma is present, there is no evidence on biopsy in the prostatic stroma of tumor invasion.
Patient must be considered able to tolerate systemic chemotherapy combined with pelvic radiation therapy, and a radical cystectomy (if necessary) by the joint agreement of the participating urologist, radiation oncologist, and medical oncologist.
Appropriate stage for protocol entry, based upon the following minimum diagnostic workup within 60 days prior to registration:
• History/physical examination including weight, performance data, body surface area
Zubrod Performance Status ≤ 1
Age ≥ 18
Complete blood count (CBC)/differential obtained no more than 30 days prior to registration on study, with adequate bone marrow function defined as follows:
If the patient is to be treated with cisplatin, the serum creatinine should be ≤ 1.5 mg%; serum bilirubin of ≤ 2.0 mg%
Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) > 25 ml/min [For patients receiving cisplatin, GFR ≥ 60 ml/min]
Serum pregnancy test for female patients of childbearing potential, ≤ 72 hours prior to study entry; women of childbearing potential and male participants must practice adequate contraception.
Patient must be able to provide study-specific informed consent prior to study entry.
Exclusion Criteria
Evidence of tumor-related hydronephrosis
Evidence of distant metastases or histologically or cytologically proven lymph node metastases
Prior systemic chemotherapy for bladder cancer; prior chemotherapy for a different cancer is allowable
A prior or concurrent malignancy of any other site or histology unless the patient has been disease-free for ≥ 5 years except for non-melanoma skin cancer and/or stage T1a prostate cancer or carcinoma in situ of the uterine cervix or a urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract stage pTa, pTis or pT1 that has not been free of disease after treatment for more than a 2-year period
Patients with pN+ or > T1 disease or who have not had a visibly complete TURBT
Patients receiving any drugs that have potential nephrotoxicity or ototoxicity (such as an aminoglycoside)
Prior radiotherapy to the region of the study cancer that would result in overlap of radiation therapy fields
Severe, active co-morbidity, defined as follows:
Pregnancy or women of childbearing potential and men who are sexually active and not willing/able to use medically acceptable forms of contraception; this exclusion is necessary because the treatment involved in this study may be significantly teratogenic.
Prior allergic reaction to the study drugs (cisplatin, mitomycin, 5FU) involved in this
Primary purpose
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37 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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