The PROMOTE study aims at optimising use of hormonal therapy in advanced stage and recurrent endometrial cancer analysing tumor tissue taken before start of hormonal therapy
There is limited consensus about the position of hormonal treatment in advanced and metastatic endometrial carcinoma (EC). This is due to lack of good quality data on patient selection, and predictive biomarkers. Consequently, consideration of hormonal therapy is subjected to personal experience of the treating physician, rather than on refined clinical and up-to-date molecular criteria. Hormonal therapy has limited side-effects, and is better tolerated than systematic chemotherapy. Since EC patients are often elderly women with comorbidities, more effective and less aggressive treatment options are needed, underlining the urgency of an explorative study on this topic. Endometrial cancer is the most common malignancy of the female genital tract in developed countries, with increasing incidence due to obesity and increased life expectancy. Most patients are diagnosed at an early stage, and have a favourable prognosis with surgery alone. Yet, 20% of the patients present with advanced or metastatic EC and have a poor outcome even with systemic treatment. Response rate of chemotherapy in advanced or metastatic EC is 30-60%, dependent of previous chemotherapy, with a progression free survival (PFS) of 3-14 months and 40% treatment related morbidity. In comparison, response to hormonal therapy is 20%-40%, with side effects in less than 5%. The overall PFS is 3 months, yet for those who respond the PFS can be up to several years. To improve selective use of hormonal therapy in EC by evaluating applied hormonal therapy in advanced and metastatic EC and correlate response to molecular tumour analysis and translate this knowledge after validation into clinical practice
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
150
Hormonal therapy used for treatment in endometrial cancer patients
Radboudumc
Nijmegen, Netherlands
RECRUITINGResponse rate
Complete or partial response according to RECIST criteria
Time frame: 2 years
Progression free survival
Interval from start of hormonal therapy to progressive disease or death
Time frame: 2 years
Clinical benefit rate
Complete or partial response or stable disease according to RECIST criteria
Time frame: 2 years
Health-related quality of life
Health-related quality of life during hormonal therapy as tested with the validated EORTC-QLQ-C30 and EORTC-QLQ-EN24 quality-of-life scales at start of hormonal therapy and 6 months after start therapy
Time frame: 6 months
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