Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Locally advanced rectal carcinoma raise the issue of both the oncological control, local and general, and the therapeutic morbidity. Surgery alone can cure only one out of two patients, radiochemotherapy improves the local control but the metastatic risk remains about 30% with enhanced postoperative morbidity and poor functional results. The tumor response to preoperative treatment is the major prognostic factor which revealed the aggressiveness of the tumor. To this day, there are no biologic predictive markers for tumor response.
The purpose of this trial is to tailor the management according to the early tumoral response after short and intensive induction chemotherapy. MRI volumetric tumor response will be used to distinguish between good responders and bad responders.
"Very good" responders will be randomized to either immediate surgery or radiochemotherapy followed by surgery (Standard arm: Cap 50).
Full description
Cancer of the rectum is a common disease. It affects nearly 15,000 new people each year, with more men (53%) than women (47%).
In more than 9 out of 10 cases, it occurs after 50 years. Three types of treatments are used to treat rectal cancer: surgery, radiotherapy and drug treatments.
The standard treatment for Locally Advanced Rectal Cancers (LARC) is multidisciplinary, combining chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery. The usual treatment in this situation is called induction chemotherapy administrated before radiochemotherapy. This phase of treatment taking place before surgery is called neoadjuvant therapy.
However, treating all cancers of the locally advanced rectum with the same neoadjuvant treatment exposes patients who are good responders to neoadjuvant chemotherapy with possible toxicity to radiotherapy and patients who are poor responders to ineffectiveness of conventional radiotherapy with surgery and so to a mutilating ineffective treatment.
The short- and long-term toxicity of pelvic radiation may be the most compelling reason to reconsider reflexive neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy (NA-RCT) and to move toward a more individualized approach.
A large North American trial is currently evaluating the suppression of preoperative radiation therapy in patients selected as a good responder to induction chemotherapy.
A first trial called GRECCAR-4 (Surgical Research Group on Rectum CAncer) with induction chemotherapy by 5 Fluorouracil + Irinotecan + Oxaliplatin and personalized radiochemotherapy reported the following results:
GRECCAR 14 is the only French trial to question the feasibility of appropriate management of non-metastatic LARC. Its main objective is to evaluate, in good responder patients, personalized management after preoperative CT treatment.
GRECCAR-14 will try to confirm this strategy taking into account the 1st results of GRECCAR 4.
The study will initially focus on 200 patients to assess the surgical quality of this therapeutic strategy and then on 230 additional patients to assess the effectiveness of this personalized treatment on survival without recurrence.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR SCREENING
Written consent,
Patient who receive Folfirinox,
Patient aged over 18 years old,
World Health Organization (WHO) performance status ≥ 1,
Histologically confirmed diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the rectum,
Distal part of the tumor from 1 to 12 cm from the upper part of the levator ani (dynamic rectal examination),
No unequivocal evidence on CT-Scan of established metastatic disease,
MRI evaluation of the locally advanced tumor before neoadjuvant chemotherapy:
NON INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR SCREENING
INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR EXPERIMENTAL TREATMENT
NON-INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR EXPERIMENTAL TREATMENT
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,075 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Philippe Rouanet, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal