To derive the maximum tolerated dose of hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) using dose painting by numbers with immunomodulating systemic therapy in patients that are reirradiated for recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.
The standard treatment in inoperable locally or regionally recurrent head and neck cancer has long been palliative systemic therapy using the so-called EXTREME-scheme: a combination of cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil and cetuximab. This therapy remains without realistic chances of cure. More recently, immunotherapy using nivolumab has demonstrated to result in long-term disease control of 1-2 year in cisplatin-refractory recurrent or metastatic head and neck cancer, however only in a small portion of patients (13%). Fractionated high-dose local or regional re-irradiation is mostly given in a 6-7 weeks scheme. Using stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), high radiotherapy doses can be given in a short time span. Severe late adverse events have been reported using SBRT but seem less frequent than in patients re-treated with conventional schedules. A possible solution to be able to administer higher doses is combining SBRT with dose painting, thus giving these high doses on small subvolumes only. Addition of concomitant therapy to reirradiation may further improve outcomes due to radiosensitization and direct cytotoxicity. Therefore the investigator aims to combine high doses with concomitant therapy in the proposed study. The immunomodulatory effect caused by radiation has been demonstrated both in animal models and clinical trials and leads to an enhanced local control as well as to eradication of distant metastasis. This so-called abscopal effect is reached through a systemic immune response evoked by the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) by the dying tumor-cells, also called immunogenic cell death (ICD). The investigator hypothesizes that an abscopal effect could be present for patients presenting locoregional recurrent disease with asymptomatic distant metastases, thereby offering at least symptom control at the primary site while palliative systemic treatment could be postponed. The proposed protocol focuses on patients with bad prognosis, as determined by a short timespan between primary therapy and recurrence (defined as 6-24 months after the end of the primary radiotherapy). It would bring the practical advantage of only 2-3 patient visits for the radiotherapy instead of ± 30-35 visits over 6-7 weeks. This shorter treatment schedule is expected to result in a direct gain in quality-of-life due to locoregional symptom control. It can also be expected that rescue systemic therapy will be postponed to a later stage of disease development, thereby prolonging overall survival. The combination with systemic agents that are involved in immunogenic cell death bear the potential to result in a higher number of patients with longer periods of disease control and survival. The current standard of care, i.e. the combined systemic treatment with cisplatin - 5-fluorouracil - cetuximab, or nivolumab in case of former cisplatin use, can be used as a rescue regimen in case of therapy failure. In that sense, better overall survival from time of diagnosis of the index locoregional recurrent disease is expected.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
The range of dose-painting will be escalated in following levels: * 2x 6-8Gy (day 1-4) * 3x 6-8Gy (day 1-4-7) * 3x 6-10Gy (day 1-4-7) * 3x 6-12Gy (day 1-4-7) Patients will take cyclophosphamide orally 50 mg tablets, 1 tablet a day from the first day of irradiation for 8 consecutive weeks. Nivolumab will be considered as standard therapy in patients with cisplatin refractory locoregional disease recurrence. Nivolumab will be administered as per current standard of care. In case patients that are treated with nivolumab will be included in the trial, they will not be treated with cyclophosphamide.
Radiotherapy department, University Hospital Ghent
Ghent, Oost-Vlaanderen, Belgium
UZ Leuven
Leuven, Belgium
CHU Namur
Namur, Belgium
maximum tolerated dose
maximum tolerated dose of hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) using dose painting by numbers with immunomodulating systemic therapy in patients that are reirradiated for recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
Time frame: 3 months after radiotherapy
symptom palliation - pain
reduction in pain
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
symptom palliation - dysphagia
reduction in grade of dysphagia
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
local control
Assessment of: 1. diameter of target lesion of SBRT (and, if present, non-target lesions) in mm 2. tumor response according to recist criteria
Time frame: 3 months after SBRT and thereafter through study completion, an average of 12 months
Overall survival
To estimate overall survival
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
Progression free survival
To estimate progression-free survival
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
grade ≥ 3 toxicity-free survival
To estimate grade ≥ 3 toxicity-free survival (anemia, febrile neutropenia, fatigue, dysphagia, oral mucositis, laryngeal mucositis, pharyngeal mucositis, pharyngeal hemorrhage, pharyngeal necrosis, pharyngeal stenosis, pharyngolaryngeal pain, dry mouth)
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Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
QOL - general
To assess quality-of-life: EORTC QLQ
Time frame: before therapy, week 3, week 6, week 10, week 14
QOL - H&N specific
To assess quality-of-life: H\&N35
Time frame: before therapy, week 3, week 6, week 10, week 14
topographic distribution of recurrence
To assess the topographic distribution of recurrence (inside/outside FDG-avid GTV)
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
time to further treatment
To assess time to further treatment
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 12 months
immune response
To assess the immune response
Time frame: using serum taken before treatment and at each fraction of SBRT, at weeks 6-14