This phase II trial is studying how well giving bevacizumab together with radiation therapy and cisplatin works in treating patients with previously untreated locally advanced cervical cancer. Monoclonal antibodies, such as bevacizumab, can block tumor growth in different ways. Some block the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Others find tumor cells and help kill them or carry tumor-killing substances to them. Bevacizumab may also stop the growth of cervical cancer by blocking blood flow to the tumor. Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to kill tumor cells. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as cisplatin, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Giving bevacizumab together with radiation therapy and cisplatin may kill more tumor cells.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. Determine treatment-related serious adverse-event rates and adverse-event rates within the first 90 days from treatment start in patients with previously untreated locally advanced carcinoma of the cervix treated with bevacizumab, cisplatin, and concurrent pelvic radiotherapy. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. Evaluate treatment-related serious adverse events and adverse events at any time. II. Evaluate disease-free survival (local, regional, or distant failure, or death due to any cause). III. Evaluate overall survival (death due to any cause). IV. Implement the image-based brachytherapy guidelines proposed by the Transatlantic Image-Guided Brachytherapy Working Group. V. Collect CT scan or MRI-based dosimetry of brachytherapy applications used during the course of treatment for later analysis of feasibility and consistency as well as dose/volume assessments of tumor control and complications. OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study. Patients undergo pelvic external-beam radiotherapy (EBRT) once daily, 5 days a week, for 5 weeks for a total of 45 Gy. Some patients also undergo low-dose rate brachytherapy twice, 1-3 weeks apart, beginning \>= 4 weeks after initiating EBRT or high-dose rate brachytherapy 5 times, \>= 48 hours apart, beginning \>= 2 weeks after initiating EBRT. EBRT and chemotherapy are halted on the day of high-dose rate brachytherapy. Patients receive bevacizumab IV over 30-90 minutes on days 1, 15, and 29 and cisplatin IV over 60 minutes on days 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, and 35. After completion of study treatment, patients are followed periodically.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
Given IV
Given IV
Undergo EBRT
Undergo brachytherapy
Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center/Disney Family Cancer Center
Burbank, California, United States
University of California Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center
Sacramento, California, United States
Penrose-Saint Francis Healthcare
Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States
University of Colorado
Denver, Colorado, United States
Baptist MD Anderson Cancer Center
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Number of Subjects With Treatment-related Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) and Adverse Events (AEs) as Assessed by CTCAE v. 3.0 Criteria Within the First 90 Days From Treatment Start.
Adverse events (AEs) graded using CTCAE v3.0. Grade (Gr) refers to the severity of the AE and assigns Gr 1 through 5 with unique clinical descriptions of severity for each AE based on this general guideline: 1= Mild AE, 2= Moderate AE, 3= Severe AE, 4= Life-threatening or disabling AE, 5= Death related to AE. Treatment-related SAEs defined as Grade (Gr) \>= 4 vaginal bleeding, Gr \>=4 thrombotic event, Gr \>=3 arterial event, gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding , or bowel/bladder perforation, and any Gr 5 treatment-related AE. Treatment-related AEs defined as all SAEs, Gr 3-4 nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea persisting for \>2 weeks despite medical intervention, Gr 4 neutropenia or leukopenia persisting for \>7 days, febrile neutropenia defined as a temperature \>38.5 degree Celsius and granulocytes \< 1000/mm3, Grade 3-4 hematologic toxicity with the exception of neutropenia and leukopenia, and Grade 3-4 GI, renal, cardiac, pulmonary, hepatic, or neurologic AEs.
Time frame: From start of treatment to 90 days.
Number of Subjects With Treatment-related SAEs and AEs as Assessed by CTCAE v. 3.0 Criteria at Any Time.
Adverse events (AEs) graded using CTCAE v3.0. Grade (Gr) refers to the severity of the AE and assigns Gr 1 through 5 with unique clinical descriptions of severity for each AE based on this general guideline: 1= Mild AE, 2= Moderate AE, 3= Severe AE, 4= Life-threatening or disabling AE, 5= Death related to AE. Treatment-related SAEs defined as Gr \>= 4 vaginal bleeding, Gr \>=4 thrombotic event, Gr \>=3 arterial event, gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding , or bowel/bladder perforation, and any Gr 5 treatment-related AE. Treatment-related AEs defined as all SAEs, Gr 3-4 nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea persisting for \>2 weeks despite medical intervention, Gr 4 neutropenia or leukopenia persisting for \>7 days, febrile neutropenia defined as a temperature \>38.5 degree Celsius and granulocytes \< 1000/mm3, Grade 3-4 hematologic toxicity with the exception of neutropenia and leukopenia, and Grade 3-4 GI, renal, cardiac, pulmonary, hepatic, or neurologic AEs.
Time frame: From start of treatment to last follow-up, up to 6.0 years. Analysis occurred after all patients had been on study for at least 2 years.
Disease-free Survival (Three-year Rate Reported)
Failure is defined as local, regional, or distant disease, or death due to any cause. Disease-free survival time is defined as time from registration to the date of failure and disease-free survival rates are estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Patients last known to be alive and disease-free are censored at the date of last contact.
Time frame: From registration to 3 years
Overall Survival (Three-year Rate Reported)
Overall survival time is defined as time from registration to the date of death from any cause and is estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Patients last known to be alive are censored at the date of last contact.
Time frame: From registration to 3 years
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