This is a phase IV, prospective, double-blind, randomized controlled trial with 2 study arms. The study population will be patients receiving chemoradiation for head and neck carcinomas, the majority of whom will be outpatients unless they require inpatient supportive care during treatment. There will be a 12 to 14-week longitudinal follow-up with 9 assessments conducted during this follow-up. The estimated duration of recruitment will be 6-8 years. Intervention group If a patient is allocated to the intervention group following randomization, the patient will be treated with StrataXRT. Control group If a patient is allocated to the control group following randomization, the patient will be treated with standard clinical practice which consists of aqueous cream.
Clinical significance and current evidence: Radiation dermatitis occurs commonly in patients receiving chemoradiation for nasopharyngeal cancer; 50 to 60% develop grade 2 or higher dermatitis. This can result in significant morbidity, reduced aesthetic appearance, decrease in quality of life and delays in treatment. Current literature does not conclusively support the use of one agent over another for prevention of radiation dermatitis. The choice of agents used in clinical practice is highly variable, with aqueous agents being one of the commonest. Specific Aims: The aim of this study is to evaluate if the investigational product (StrataXRT), a silicone-based gel, is superior to standard clinical practice in prevention of grade 2 or higher acute dermatitis in patients receiving chemoradiation for nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Trial Design: The study will be conducted using a prospective, double-blind randomized control trial in 2 institutions. Each arm will receive standard radiation to a total dose of 70 Gray (Gy) with concurrent chemotherapy. The primary objective is to compare the prevention of dermatitis and the primary endpoint is reached when grade 2 or higher dermatitis according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 4.03 scale occurs. Secondary objectives will be evaluation of the time to onset of dermatitis, the time to complete recovery from dermatitis and the degree of pain. Assessment of the patient's skin will be done at baseline, weekly during treatment, 1 week post treatment and unless the skin has resolved to baseline then every week up until 6 weeks post-treatment, which will mark the end of follow-up. The safety end-point is reached when grade 4 dermatitis occurs. Hypothesis and statistics: The investigators aim to demonstrate a 30% reduction in the incidence of grade 2 or higher dermatitis with StrataXRT. Using a 2-sided test at significance level 0.05 to detect the difference with a power of 80%, the investigators envisage a recruitment of 100-150 patients in total. The study duration is estimated to be 8 years.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
100
randomized patient allocated to this group will receive StrataXRT for application during the treatment and 4 weeks further after the treatment ends.
National University Hospital
Singapore, Singapore
RECRUITINGgrade 2 acute radiation dermatitis
when patient develops grade 2 acute radiation dermatitis as scored by Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Event (CTCAE) version 4.03 scale with grade 1 the mildest, Grade 1: faint erythema or dry desquamation Grade 2: moderate to brisk erythema; patchy moist desquamation; moderate edema Grade 3: moist desquamation other than skin folds and creases; bleeding induced by minor trauma or abrasion Grade 4: skin necrosis or ulceration of full thickness dermis; spontaneous bleeding from involved site Grade 5: death
Time frame: 10 weeks
completion of scheduled post-treatment assessment at 6 weeks post-radiotherapy
when patient completed the scheduled post-radiotherapy assessment
Time frame: 12 weeks
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