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About
RATIONALE: Thalidomide may stop the growth of colorectal cancer by stopping blood flow to the tumor. Giving thalidomide after surgery may kill any remaining tumor cells.
PURPOSE: This randomized phase II trial is studying surgery and thalidomide to see how well they work compared to surgery alone in treating patients with recurrent or metastatic colorectal cancer.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
OUTLINE: This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Patients are stratified according to site of most recent lesion resection that rendered no evidence of disease (lung vs liver with no more than 3 lesions vs liver with more than 3 lesions vs lung and liver vs all other sites[including sites that were both resected and ablated]). Patients without evidence of residual disease are randomized to one of two treatment arms.
Patients are followed every 3 months for up to 3 years.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 94 patients (47 per treatment arm) will be accrued for this study within 3 years.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Diagnosis of recurrent or metastatic colorectal carcinoma previously resected within 12 weeks of study entry
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
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PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Biologic therapy:
Chemotherapy:
Endocrine therapy:
Radiotherapy:
Surgery:
Other:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
39 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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