The therapy of patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer will be adjusted to the grade of skin rush as recorded after the first two cycles of Cetuximab and Cisplatin, i.e. either with radioimmunotherapy (radiotherapy and Cetuximab) or radiochemotherapy (radiotherapy and Cisplatin.
Background: According to literature, the treatment results in irradiated patients who develop intensive skin reaction after concomitant Cetuximab administration appear improved as compared to the results of standard combination of radiotherapy and Cisplatin. In other patients, no beneficial effect of Cetuximab is expected and the therapy with Cisplatin (concomitantly with irradiation) is more effective in this group. In this proposed single-institution non-randomized phase II study on patients with locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, the therapy will be adjusted to the grade of skin rush as recorded after the first two cycles of Cetuximab and Cisplatin, i.e. either with radioimmunotherapy (radiotherapy and Cetuximab) or radiochemotherapy (radiotherapy and Cisplatin). Methods: In the patients with inoperable tumors, induction chemotherapy (Docetaxel 75 mg/m2, Cisplatin 75 mg/m2, 5-Fluorouracil 750 mg/m2 in continuous infusion days 1-5; repeated every 21 days for 4 cycles) will be administered. In the week before the first fraction of radiotherapy, all patients will receive a loading dose of Cetuximab (400 mg/m2) and combination of Cetuximab (250 mg/m2) and Cisplatin (30 mg/m2) during the first week of irradiation. After multidisciplinary assessment of the grade of skin rush, conducted at the end of the second week of irradiation, the patients will be grouped as follows: arm A - skin rush of CTCAE v3.0 grade \<2 will proceed with radiochemotherapy with Cisplatin; arm B - skin rush of CTCAE v3.0 grade \>=2 will proceed with radioimmunotherapy with Cetuximab. The planned number of patients included in the study is 120 (arm A - 50, arm B - 70) and recruitment period is 3 years. The primary objective of the study is to determine radiologically the complete response rate 12-14 weeks after therapy. The secondary objectives are locoregional control, progression-free survival and overall survival at 2 years after therapy, acute and late toxicity. Expected results: The expected complete response rate in patients treated with radiochemotherapy and those treated with radioimmunotherapy is 50% and 75%, respectively. We also expect the difference in an absolute survival gain between the groups to be 25%.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
120
cisplatin 30 mg/m2/week I.V. during radiotherapy
3-dimensional conformal radiotherapy planning and delivery, 35x2 Gy/day over 7 weeks
cetuximab 400 mg/m2 I.V. 1 week before the start of radiotherapy, cetuximab 250 mg2/week I.V. during radiotherapy
Institute of Oncology Ljubljana
Ljubljana, Slovenia
RECRUITINGlocoregional complete response rate
The primary objective of the study is to determine radiologically the complete response rate 12-14 weeks after therapy.
Time frame: 12-14 weeks after therapy
feasibility (toxicity profile) of the proposed regimen
number of patients with adverse events graded according to the National Cancer Institute CTC v3.0 (as measure of safety and tolerability)
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of treatment (an expected average of 20 weeks)
locoregional control
Locoregional control will be calculated from the first day of the therapy to the occurrence of the local and/or regional recurrence (whichever will occur first) or death from any cause other than distant metastasis.
Time frame: at 2 years after thapy
progression-free survival
Progression-free will be calculated from the first day of the therapy to the appearance of local or regional recurrence, distant metastases, secondary primary cancer or death from any cause.
Time frame: 2 years after therapy
overall survival
Overall survival is defined as a time interval between the first day of therapy and death from any cause.
Time frame: 2 years after therapy
late toxicity including thyroid function
number of patients with adverse events graded according to the National Cancer Institute CTC v3.0 (as measure of safety and tolerability)
Time frame: up to 2 years post-therapy
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