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Rationale:
For patients with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma, surgery is the only treatment modality that can result in cure. Unfortunately, in the majority of these patients the tumors are found to be unresectable at presentation due to local invasive tumor growth or the presence of distal metastases. For patients with unresectable cholangiocarcinoma palliative chemotherapy is the standard treatment yielding an estimated median overall survival of 12-15.2 months. There is no evidence from randomized trials that support the routine use of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for cholangiocarcinoma. However, small and most often retrospective studies combining chemotherapy with SBRT showed promising results with overall survival reaching up to 33-35 months.
Based upon these observations, the investigators designed a local feasibility trial with SBRT after chemotherapy in patients with unresectable perihilar cholangiocarcinoma in order to try to confirm the observed tolerability of adding SBRT to standard chemotherapy. The expected time to include the required patients for this pilot study will be one year.
Objective:
To assess feasibility of SBRT as add on treatment after standard chemotherapy.
Study design:
Local feasibility trial.
Study population:
Patients diagnosed with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma, 18 years of age or older, T1-4 N0-1 M0 (AJCC 7th Edition), after completion of standard chemotherapy. Exclusion criteria are local tumor growth into either stomach, colon, duodenum, pancreas or abdominal wall. Sample size will be 6 patients.
Intervention:
SBRT will be delivered in 15 fractions of 3 to 4.5Gy after 8 cycles of chemotherapy. In case of toxicity causing premature termination of systemic treatment, the patient can still proceed to SBRT.
Main study parameters/endpoints:
The primary endpoint of this study is feasibility measured by radiotherapy induced toxicity according to CTC v4.0.3.
Secondary endpoints will be:
Full description
For patients with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma, surgery is the only treatment modality that can result in cure. Unfortunately, in the majority of these patients the tumors are found to be unresectable at presentation due to local invasive tumor growth or the presence of distant metastases. For these patients palliative chemotherapy is the standard treatment yielding an estimated median overall survival of 12-15.2 months. There is no evidence from randomized trials that supports the routine use of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for unresectable cholangiocarcinoma. However, small and most often retrospective studies combining chemotherapy with SBRT showed promising results with overall survival reaching up to 33-35 months.
This pilot study is designed as a first step to confirm and extend these findings. Up to six patients diagnosed with unresectable perihilar cholangiocarcinoma will be treated with standard chemotherapy followed by SBRT in order to assess possible severe side effects of the treatment. As part of this research, patients will be followed with CT- or MRI-scan and blood tests exams until progression. In addition to this clinical evaluation, the investigators will also work towards developing a predictive assay for radiotherapy response of both normal and tumor tissue by establishing normal tissue and tumor organoids and determining several key parameters for their response to ionizing radiation treatment.
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Inclusion criteria
In order to be eligible to participate in this study, a subject must be discussed in a multidisciplinary liver tumor board and should meet all of the following criteria:
Patients diagnosed with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma according to the criteria of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester:
Positive or strongly suspicious intraluminal brush or biopsy or,
A radiographic malignant appearing stricture plus either:
One tumor mass
Unresectable tumor
Finished chemotherapy treatment with Gemcitabine and Cisplatin, preferably 8 cycles. If less cycles are given, patients are still eligible for this study.
T1-T4 (AJCC staging 7th edition), before chemotherapy
N0-N1 (AJCC staging 7th edition), radiologically or pathologically suspect, before chemotherapy
Measurable disease to be selected as a target on CT/MRI-scan, according to RECIST criteria, after chemotherapy within 6 weeks prior to inclusion
Tumor visibility on CT
If liver cirrhosis is present, it should be well compensated, with Child-Pugh grade A.
Age ≥ 18 years
ECOG performance status 0-1
Bilirubin ≤1.5 times normal value, AST/ALT ≤5 times ULN, within 6 weeks prior to inclusion
Platelets ≥ 50x10E9/ l, Leukocytes > 1.5x10E9/l, Hb > 6 mmol/l, within 6 weeks prior to inclusion
Written informed consent, after chemotherapy
Willing and able to comply to the follow-up schedule
Able to start SBRT within 12 weeks after completion of chemotherapy.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
6 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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