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Surgery and Radiation Therapy Compared With Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy in Treating Patients With Stage III or Stage IV Head and Neck Cancer That Can Be Removed During Surgery

N

National Cancer Centre, Singapore

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Head and Neck Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: surgical procedure
Drug: cisplatin
Drug: fluorouracil
Radiation: radiation therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00003576
CDR0000066643
NMRC-SHN01
EU-97015

Details and patient eligibility

About

RATIONALE: Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to damage tumor cells. Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. It is not yet known whether surgery plus radiation therapy is more effective than chemotherapy plus radiation therapy for head and neck cancer.

PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is studying surgery and radiation therapy to see how well they work compared to chemotherapy and radiation therapy in treating patients with stage III or stage IV head and neck cancer that can be removed during surgery.

Full description

OBJECTIVES:

  • Compare the complete response rate, disease-free survival, and overall survival of patients with resectable (nonmetastatic) stage III or IV squamous cell cancer of the head and neck treated with surgery and adjuvant radiotherapy versus concurrent chemo-radiotherapy.

OUTLINE: This is a randomized study. Patients are stratified according to primary site of disease (oral cavity/oropharynx vs larynx/hypopharynx vs others) and nodal status (node negative vs positive).

  • Arm I: Patients undergo resection of the tumor, followed no more than 6 weeks later by radiotherapy to the primary tumor and upper neck once a day, 5 days a week, for 6 weeks.
  • Arm II: Patients undergo radiotherapy in addition to chemotherapy with fluorouracil and cisplatin. Radiotherapy is given once a day, 5 days a week, for 6.5 weeks to the primary tumor and upper neck. Fluorouracil and cisplatin are administered by continuous infusion for 4 days beginning on day 1 of the first week of radiotherapy. A second course of fluorouracil and cisplatin is given on day 28.

Patients who have failed or are suspected to have failed chemo-radiotherapy should be considered for salvage surgery.

Patients are followed once a month for the first year, every 2 months for the second year, every 3 months for the third year, and every 6 months thereafter.

PROJECTED ACCRUAL: Approximately 200 patients will be accrued over a 4-5 year period.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:

  • Histologically confirmed head and neck squamous cell cancer (excluding nasopharynx and salivary glands) on biopsy of the primary lesion or the neck mass

  • Stage III or IV disease

    • No evidence of distant or systemic metastases
  • Resectable disease

PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:

Age:

  • Not specified

Performance status:

  • ECOG 0-1

Life expectancy:

  • Not specified

Hematopoietic:

  • WBC greater than 3000/mm^3
  • Platelet count greater than 100,000/mm^3

Hepatic:

  • SGOT less than 2 times upper limit of normal
  • Bilirubin less than 1.4 mg/dL

Renal:

  • Creatinine less than 1.6 mg/dL

Other:

  • No prior or concurrent primary malignancies
  • Not pregnant
  • Fertile patients must use effective contraception

PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:

Biologic therapy:

  • Not specified

Chemotherapy:

  • No prior chemotherapy

Endocrine therapy:

  • Not specified

Radiotherapy:

  • No prior radiotherapy to the head and neck

Surgery:

  • See Disease Characteristics
  • No prior surgery (other than biopsy)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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