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About
This study will enroll patients with HPV-associated oropharyngeal cancer, undergoing resection of all gross visible disease at the primary site and in the lymph nodes. A total of 40 patients who have had or will require surgery to remove cancer cells prior to starting chemoradiation may be enrolled. All eligible patients will receive de-intensified cisplatin-based chemoradiation, with high-risk patients receiving a higher dose and longer treatment period than other patients on the study. The study will assess whether a de-intensified version of standard chemoradiation treatment will be just as effective in treating HPV-associated oropharyngeal cancer while causing less side effects than standard dosing.
Full description
This is a single arm phase II study that will enroll patients with HPV-associated oropharyngeal cancer, undergoing resection through trans-oral robotic surgery (TORS) of all gross visible disease at the primary site and in the lymph nodes. A total of 36 patients at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and its affiliates (Tower Hematology-Oncology, Torrance Memorial Physician Network) who have had or will require surgery to remove cancer cells prior to starting chemoradiation may be enrolled. All eligible patients will receive de-intensified cisplatin-based chemoradiation, with high-risk patients receiving a higher dose and longer treatment period than other patients on the study. The treatment period will last 3 to 5 weeks depending on whether the patient is considered high-risk or not. The study will assess whether a de-intensified version of standard chemoradiation treatment will be just as effective in treating HPV-associated oropharyngeal cancer while causing less side effects than standard dosing.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
AJCC 8th edition T0-3N0-2 p16-positive oropharyngeal (tonsil, base of tongue, glossotonsillar sulcus, soft palate, oropharyngeal wall) squamous cell carcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma of unknown primary involving the cervical lymph nodes. Cytologic diagnosis from a cervical lymph node is sufficient for diagnosis in the presence of clinical evidence of a primary tumor in the oropharynx.
For patients with pT0 tumors (unknown primary), there must be at least one metastatic lymph node present in cervical level II.
p16 should be strongly and diffusely positive in the nuclear and cytoplasmic component in greater than 70% of the tumor cells.
Have undergone or will undergo gross total resection of all known disease in the head and neck via transoral robotic surgery. For patients with unknown primary tumors, a minimum of an ipsilateral tonsillectomy and base of tongue resection is required.
Have undergone or will undergo neck dissection.
Have at least one of the following after surgery:
Age ≥ 18 years old
ECOG performance status 0 or 1 within 56 days of start of chemoradiation.
Women of childbearing potential require a negative serum or urine pregnancy test within 28 days prior to start of chemoradiation.
Written informed consent obtained from subject and ability for subject to comply with the requirements of the study.
Adequate hematologic and renal function within 30 days of start of chemoradiation, defined as:
Exclusion criteria
AJCC 8th edition pT4 or cN3 disease.
Radiologic or clinical evidence of distant metastasis.
Recurrent disease.
Inability to achieve gross total resection at time of surgery.
Greater than 56 days (8 weeks) after surgical resection of the primary site.
Prior radiation to the head and neck > 30 Gy.
Prior active invasive (not in situ) malignancy within the prior 2 years, excluding cutaneous basal cell or squamous cell carcinoma, low or intermediate risk prostate cancer, papillary thyroid cancer, AJCC 8th edition stage I-II breast cancer, or low grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Severe, active co-morbidity, defined as follows:
Moderate to severe hearing loss.
Active connective tissue disease (e.g. systemic lupus erythematous, scleroderma) requiring immunosuppression.
Pregnant or breast-feeding women.
Prior allergic reaction to cisplatin.
Live vaccines within 30 days prior to the first dose of chemoradiation. Examples of live vaccines include, but are not limited to, the following: measles, mumps, rubella, chicken pox, yellow fever, rabies, BCG, and typhoid (oral vaccine). Season influenza vaccines for injection are generally killed virus vaccines and are allowed; however intranasal influenza vaccines (e.g. Flu-Mist®) are live attenuated vaccines and are not allowed.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Amy Oppenheim
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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