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The goal of this clinical trial is to compare surgery plus reduced target chemoradiotherapy with surgery plus reduced dose chemoradiotherapy in newly diagnosed operable Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma.The main questions it aims to answer are:whether endoscopic surgery combined with reduced dose chemoradiotherapy vs surgery plus target reduction chemoradiotherapy can bring substantial survival benefits, lower toxicity, and shorter treatment cycle for patients with operable nasopharyngeal carcinoma .
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Currently, the treatment of newly diagnosed non-metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma with intensity modulated radiotherapy as the core and chemotherapy with platinum-containing drugs has achieved good therapeutic outcomes. However, the toxicity and side effects caused by local radiotherapy greatly affect the quality of life of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma during treatment. In order to find a more "high-efficiency and low-toxicity" nasopharyngeal cancer treatment mode, combined with minimally invasive surgery for radical tumor treatment and radiotherapy and chemotherapy to eliminate potential micro-metastatic lesions,, Our team has previously carried out "prospective clinical trial of newly diagnosed operable nasopharyngeal carcinoma surgery combined with reduced target chemoradiotherapy versus conventional chemoradiotherapy", It has been prelim natively confirmed that gross tumor volume(GTV) and clinical tumor volume (CTV1) high-risk infiltrating area need not be recharacterized after the combined nasopharyngeal or non-combined retropharyngeal surgery and radical resection of cervical lesions. Only low risk infiltrating area (CTV2) was delineated and preventive irradiation of 54 Gy/33 times /45 days was administered, combined with induction or concurrent chemotherapy. Preliminary study results showed that it could further reduce the local recurrence of tumors and the overall curative effect while reducing the toxic side effects of treatment and achieve the therapeutic effect of increased efficacy and reduced toxicity.
Although compared to the conventional radiotherapy dose of 70Gy, postoperative reduced target radiotherapy has achieved a significant reduction in radiotherapy dose while ensuring tumor control, However, we are concerned that nearly 40% of patients still have ≥ grade 3 dry mouth, mucosal ulcer, mouth difficulty and dysphagia during or after treatment. Therefore, for newly diagnosed patients with surgically resectable nasopharyngeal carcinoma, we plan to conduct a prospective clinical trial comparing the survival prognosis and toxic side effects of newly diagnosed surgery combined with reduced dose radiotherapy compared with conventional reduced target radiotherapy combined with concurrent chemotherapy. To explore whether this treatment model can bring comparable survival benefits, lower toxic side effects and shorter treatment cycles for patients.
According to our team's previous research results and literature data, we designed the following scheme: patients with operable nasopharyngeal carcinoma were assigned to the control group and the experimental group. Control group: nasopharyngeal combined with or without combined retropharyngeal and neck lesions radical surgery, postoperative routine target reduction chemoradiotherapy at the same period. Experimental group: Patients underwent radical surgery with or without nasopharynx combined with retropharyngeal and cervical lesions, followed by concurrent low-dose radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
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384 participants in 2 patient groups
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You-Ping Liu, PhD; Ming-Yuan Chen, MD,PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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