Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The purpose of this study is to assess the therapeutic activity of capecitabine alone or in combination with mitomycin C as second-line therapy in patients with advanced/metastatic biliary adenocarcinoma in progression after gemcitabine and platinum compounds
Full description
Biliary tract adenocarcinoma is an uncommon tumor with a poor prognosis and a median overall survival (OS) rarely exceeding 6 months. Less than 25% of patients are resectable at diagnosis and, even in this subset of patients, relapse rate is high. An improvement of OS and quality of life for patients receiving chemotherapy versus best supportive care was demonstrated in advanced disease. Recently, cisplatin and gemcitabine combination was identified as the new standard first-line chemotherapy, yielding a median progression free survival (PFS) and median OS of 8.5 and 11.7 months, respectively. Despite the outcome improvement, disease progression is a constant and approximately half of patients failing upfront treatment has a good performance status and are willing to undergo further treatment. No standard salvage chemotherapy regimen has been identified. Clinical trials are difficult to perform due to the rarity and heterogeneity of these tumors and to the lack of interest of the pharmaceutical industry. Fluoropyrimidines and mitomycin C have been considered the basis of palliative chemotherapy for a long time. The investigators decided to explore the activity, in terms of PFS, of capecitabine alone or combined with mitomycin C as second-line therapy in patients with pathological diagnosis of advanced biliary tract cancer and progressive disease after gemcitabine and cisplatin, by means of an open label randomized multicentric phase II trial.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
52 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal