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Safety Study of Liver Transplantation for Hilar Cholangiocarcinoma

N

Nanjing University

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 2
Phase 1

Conditions

Hilar Cholangiocarcinoma

Treatments

Other: liver transplantation combined with neoadjuvant therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02178280
20140615

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hilar cholangiocarcinoma is a highly malignant tumor. Surgical resection or simple liver transplantation leads to poor prognosis accompanied by high recurrence rate and low survival rate. The newly proposed neoadjuvant therapy with liver transplantation strategy shows promising clinical application, which once reported 5-year survival rate 82%. However, transplantation centers conducting this kind of research are limited due to its complexity and long-term. The investigators would like to conduct a clinical trial for only unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma patients who should take neoadjuvant brachytherapy and chemoradiotherapy followed by orthotopic liver transplantation.

Full description

The enrolled patients should be prescribed with several examinations when admitted to hospital consisting of CT, MRI, MRCP, ECT, PET/CT and other laboratory tests. All preoperative examinations must indicate that enrolled individuals should be diagnosed as unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma. In addition, repetitive ERCP manipulations are needed in order to obtain positive results by brush cytology. Of course, all enrolled patients should be adherent to the fundamental principles of liver transplantation.

We employed I-125 radioactive plastic stents (patent No: ZL 201610116321.3) to conduct brachytherapy. Each stent composed of a drainage tube with a stab at both ends that had a stabilizing effect. Two opposite channels were made in the wall of stents paralleling the drainage lumen, with irradiation window in the lateral wall of the channel. The diameter of the channel is a bit smaller than that of the radioactive seeds, so as is the length and width of irradiation windows. The stents are so designed to immobilize seeds and radiate properly. The radioactive I-125 seeds were 4.5 mm long and 0.8 mm thick, and their half-life was 60.1 days. The nasobiliary radiography was performed to determine the length of involvement of bile duct.Corresponding radioactive seeds are then put in appropriate location with biliary stents by ERCP procedure.

About a month later, external beam radiotherapy was administrated to a target dose of 30Gy in 30 fractions, 1.5Gy twice per day. Concomitantly, Intravenous capecitabine was given at 1.0g bid for two weeks, which is repeated after 14 days until transplantation.

Immunosuppressive therapy was provided with tacrolimus, mycophenolate and corticosteroids. Corticosteroids were withdrawn a week later. Chemotherapy was continued 1 month after OLT with expected 3 courses.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma tumor diameter less than 3 cm adherence to liver transplantation requirements

Exclusion criteria

intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma uncontrolled infection intrahepatic or extrahepatic metastasis distant lymph node metastasis

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

60 participants in 2 patient groups

unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma
No Intervention group
Description:
control group
liver transplantation
Experimental group
Description:
liver transplantation combined with neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy
Treatment:
Other: liver transplantation combined with neoadjuvant therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yitao Ding, MD; Jinyang Gu, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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