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NK malignancies consist of two different clinical entities, extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma and aggressive NK leukaemia. Queen Mary Hospital (QMH) had started to use PIGLETS chemotherapy for treatment of NK malignancies since 2013, with promising results. The study in QMH had ended because of successful recruitment in the planned number of subjects.
When PIGLETS was used in extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma, patients with stage I/II lymphoma have an overall response rate of nearly 90%, while patients with stage III/IV disease have an overall response rate of around 60%. The figures are comparable to the SMILE chemotherapy previously used. However, PIGLETS regimen carries much lower risk of nephrotoxicity when compared with SMILE. It has since become a standard protocol in management of NK malignancies in our institution.
PIGLETS chemotherapy carries two major problems:
Thus the investigators decided to start a study, renaming the original PIGLETS regimen into SIMPLE chemotherapy, adding aprepitant as antiemetics and to recruit more patients for evaluation of clinical efficacy. The results of SIMPLE chemotherapy will be compared to SMILE in a non-inferiority trial setting.
Full description
Natural killer (NK)/T-cell malignancies comprise two related entities, extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma and aggressive NK leukaemia. The disease occurs world-wide but Asian and South American populations are particularly affected, NK/T cell malignancies carry poor prognosis, the response rate is low with conventional CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisolone) or CHOP-like regimen even for newly diagnosed disease. These regimens are typically ineffective for relapsed disease.
In the last 10 years the investigators have employed two different regimen sequentially. The former SMILE regimen (Dexamethasone, methotrexate, ifosfamide, L-asparaginase and etoposide) harness the combination of P-gp independent chemotherapy in management of NK/T cell malignancies with great success. However, nephrotoxicity remained a major concern with the use of this regimen. The SMILE regimen was later modified as PIGLETS regimen (cisplatin, ifosfamide, gemcitabine, L-asparaginase, etoposide, dexamethasone) to reduce the risk of nephrotoxicity while preserving the treatment efficacy. The study with the use of PIGLETS was approved by IRB. The preliminary results of phase II clinical trial with PIGLETS at Queen Mary Hospital resulted in an overall response rate (ORR) of 80% in newly diagnosed disease.
The recruitment was completed with previous PIGLETS phase II trial. The problems with the PIGLETS regimen are:
In addition, there is a need of further subject recruitment for comparison with SMILE therapy for non-inferiority. In the current study, the regimen was renamed as 'SIMPLE' and aprepitant (a substance P antagonist) was added in the regimen to reduce the incidence of nausea and vomiting. The current study aims to compare SIMPLE to SMILE in a 'non-inferiority' design.
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68 participants in 1 patient group
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Crosby Lu, MMedSc; Dr Thomas Chan, MBBS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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