Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The primary objective will be to determine the feasibility of performing a high-quality sublobar anatomic resection (segmentectomy) with R0 margin status on final pathology for patients who received induction therapy for NSCLC and are downstaged to ≤ycT1cN0M0 (TDi 3cm or less). T1c is tumor staging 1 and c stands for tumor is considered larger than 2cm but no larger than 3cm across; N0 is No regional lymph node metastasis; M0 is No distant metastasis.
Full description
With the advent of effective neoadjuvant therapies, many patients with Stage II or III lung cancer are being downstaged to Stage I. Recent studies have shown that sublobar resections, especially segmentectomy, offer superior long-term survival and quality of life for patients with Stage I cancer. However, aside from isolated cases, the safety and feasibility of performing segmentectomy on patients who were initially diagnosed with advanced-stage cancer but were later downstaged to Stage I remain unexplored. Thus, our hypothesis is that segmentectomy can be safely executed in these downstaged Stage I patients after neoadjuvant therapy, without necessitating a conversion to lobectomy due to technical complications. Both segmentectomy and lobectomy are considered standard-of-care lung resection procedures.
Recent randomized clinical trials have demonstrated high rates of pathological downstaging for locally advanced lung cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy with R0 resection rates of 83.2% to 77.8% in recent historical controls. Other recent trials demonstrated that high-quality segmentectomy is associated with improved overall survival and is now standard-of-care for early-stage lung cancer with small tumor sizes. Given these findings, the logical next step is to determine if the benefits of high-quality segmentectomy may be extended to an increasingly common clinical scenario where locally advanced lung cancers are downstaged to small tumor size after induction therapy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Table 1: Measures of Adequate Organ Function. FEV1 or DLCO ≥40% (DLCO: diffusing capacity of lung for carbon monoxide)
NOTE: A FOCBP is any woman (regardless of sexual orientation, having undergone a tubal ligation, or remaining celibate by choice) who meets the following criteria:
Exclusion criteria
Patients who have had prior lung resection or thoracic surgery.
Patients who have not recovered from adverse events due to prior anti-cancer therapy (i.e., have residual toxicities > Grade 1) with the exception of alopecia.
Patients who are receiving any other investigational agents.
Patients with evidence of distant metastases including brain metastases will be excluded from this study because they will not benefit from surgical resection.
Patients that do not have documented consensus agreement on the feasibility of anatomic sublobar resection (segmentectomy) from at least 2 study surgeons will not be enrolled.
Patients with pre-induction therapy tumor involving greater than 1 lobe.
Patients who have an uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to any of the following, are not eligible:
Female patients who are pregnant. Pregnant patients are excluded from this study because the study protocol requires frequent cross-sectional imaging with potential for teratogenic effects.
Patients with another malignancy within 3 years (except for non-melanoma skin cancer, CIS of cervix (a preinvasive carcinomatous change of the cervix), superficial bladder cancer). Patients with prior malignancies are excluded to isolate overall survival outcomes.
Patients with active smoking status or cessation <4 weeks prior to surgical resection.
Patients with biopsy positive hilar or mediastinal lymph nodes following induction therapy detected by EBUS (endobronchial ultrasound), mediastinoscopy, or intraoperative sampling.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
25 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Nisha Palanisamy; Ankit Bharat, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal