This research study is a Pilot Study. Pilot studies are conducted to see if it is practical to do this type of research ona larger scale in the future. The pilot part of the study is to assess the possibility of using pencil beam proton radiation to treat your type of cancer. Proton radiation is used for many other types of malignancies, but its use for the treatment of anal cancer has been limited. The treatment is still being studied as research doctors are trying to find out more about its use in the treatment of anal cancer. Proton beam radiation therapy is an FDA approved radiation delivery system. You are being asked to participate in this study because you have cancer in the anal canal. Conventional radiation therapy with photons in combination with 5-FU and mitomycin-C is used as standard treatment for many patients with anal cancer. In this research study we are looking at another type of radiation called proton radiation, which is known to spare surrounding tissue and organs from radiation. Proton radiation delivers radiation to the area requiring radiation but delivers no dose beyond the region requiring treatment. There are several techniques that can be used to deliver proton radiation therapy. One of the newer techniques, called pencil beam scanning, allows for more accurate delivery of radiation to your tumor and further reduces the amount of normal tissue exposed to radiation. Most proton patients are treated with a number of beams that study doctors conform to the shape of your tumor. Pencil beam scanning delivers radiation with a single, narrow proton beam that is swept over the area of your tumor. This may reduce side effects that patients would normally experience with conventional radiation therapy or other means of delivering proton radiation therapy, and also minimizes treatment time. In this research study, we are evaluating the effectiveness of using pencil beam proton radiation delivered to reduce side effects associated with radiation treatment.
If you agree to participate in this study, you will be asked to undergo some screening tests or procedures to confirm that you are eligible. Many of these tests and procedures are likely to be part of regular cancer care and may be done even if it turns out that you do not take part in the research study. If you have had some of these tests or procedures recently, they may or may not have to be repeated. The screening will include the following: a medical history, physical examination, biopsy of your tumor, anal and groin exam, archival tumor tissue, CT or PET-CT, MRI, blood tests and a serum pregnancy test. If these tests show that you are eligible to participate in the research study, you will begin the study treatment. If you do not meet the eligibility criteria, you will not be able to participate in this research study. Proton Radiation will be delivered daily for 5-6 weeks, depending on the dose prescribed by your physician. Treatment is delivered (Monday-Friday) for 5 days (no weekends or holidays). Each treatment will require that you lie on a table for 25-30 minutes. You will receive radiation therapy as an outpatient at the Massachusetts General Hospital. You will start receiving chemotherapy within 5 days of starting radiation treatment. The day you start chemotherapy will be considered Day 1. You will receive Mitomycin-C on Days 1 and 29 of chemotherapy. Mitomycin-C will be delivered via IV infusion over a period of 10-30 minutes. You will receive 5-fluorouracil on Day 1 and 29 of chemotherapy. You will be fitted with an ambulatory infusion pump that will administer 5-FU via IV infusion continuously over a period of 96 hours. The infusion pump will be about the size of a paperback book that can fit into a front-pack or "fanny-pack" around your waist. This pump will be connected to your body. The nurses in the infusion room will start the pump and disconnect it after 4 days. At your 6 and 12 week follow up visits, a physical examination and the tests and procedures you receive will tell your study doctor whether your disease has gotten better, worse or stayed the same. If your cancer has gotten better, you will continue to be monitored at your follow up visits. If your cancer is suspected to have gotten worse, you will need to have a biopsy to confirm. If the biopsy is negative, you will need to come back for re-evaluation at 16 weeks (about 4 months) after completing radiation therapy. If the biopsy confirms that your cancer has gotten worse, your doctor will recommend that you have surgery for the removal of your tumor. If your cancer has stayed the same, your doctor will recommend that you have additional procedures done to develop a plan for treatment. After you complete radiation therapy, you will be followed for up to 5 years.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Roberts Proton Therapy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Feasibility of administration of pencil beam scanning proton beam radiation with chemotherapy for anal cancer
The primary objective of this study is to determine feasibility of administration of pencil beam scanning proton beam radiotherapy in combination with concurrent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and mitomycin-C for carcinoma of the anal canal. Proton radiotherapy will be considered feasible if grade 3+ skin toxicity seen on this protocol is less than 48% (reported grade 3+ dermatologic toxicity from RTOG 98-11)
Time frame: 2 years
Assessment of Adverse Events
To assess rates of grade 3+ acute toxicities in the first 90 days following the start of combined modality treatment. To evaluate adverse events associated with the treatment regimens after 90 days from the start of combined modality treatment.
Time frame: 2 years
Quality of Life Outcomes
To assess health related quality-of-life outcomes after proton radiotherapy for anal carcinoma using objective measurements and validated quality-of-life instruments. Health quality of life questionnaire will be completed before treatment, within 2 weeks of completion of radiotherapy and quarterly for 15 months.
Time frame: 2 years
Clinical Complete Response
Estimate the clinical complete response rate at 6 weeks and 12 weeks after completion of treatment.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Radiotherapy treatment time
Evaluate elapsed time form radiotherapy treatment start to radiotherapy treatment end
Time frame: 2 years
Local-regional failure
Estimate the rate of local-regional failure; local-regional failure will be measured from study entry to date of first local or regional failure
Time frame: 2 years
Colostomy Failure and Colostomy-Free Survival
Estimate the rate of colostomy failure; colostomy failure will be measured from study entry to date of colostomy failure. Estimate the rate of colostomy-free survival; colostomy-free survival will be measured from study entry.
Time frame: 2 years
Disease-free Survival
Estimate the rate of disease-free survival; disease-free survival will be measured from study entry to date of first local, regional, distant or second primary failure or date of death.
Time frame: 2 years
Overall Survival
Estimate the rate of overall survival; overall survival will be measured from study entry to date of death.
Time frame: 2 years
Correlative Studies
Evaluate prevalence and prognostic significance of Bcl-2, Bcl-X1, HPV
Time frame: 2 years
To describe mood in the study population
To describe QOL and mood in this study population to help us better identify the side effects and challenges faced by patients.
Time frame: 2 years
To measure utilization of health services
To measure utilization of health services (emergency room, hospital and intensive care unit) in the study population.
Time frame: 2 years
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