Randomized, non-comparative, multicentre exploratory phase II study. Two arms concerning patients with bone sarcoma after the first line therapy: in the first arm, patients will be treated with Regorafenib for a maximum of 12 months as maintenance therapy after first line therapy, whereas in the second arm, patients will be kept under surveillance (standard of care). Regardless of their study arm, all the patients will be followed up until end of the study. The comparison between these two arms will allow to determine whether or not regorafenib is efficient for disease control, in terms of Relapse-Free Survival improvement.
Bone sarcomas are rare primary bone cancers, although, their frequency has been increasing by 0.3% per year over the last decade. They include a very large number of tumour types belonging to the family of primary malignant bone tumours and originate from bone as Osteosarcomas (OS), Chondrosarcomas (CS), Fibrosarcomas, Chordomas, … Current conventional treatments for OS combine chemotherapy and surgery. Chemotherapy treatment is commonly given for OS over a period of 6-10 months, with a period of preoperative chemotherapy, to facilitate local surgical treatment. The conventional cocktail used in OS is composed by a minimum of three drugs (reference combination: methotrexate, doxorubicin and cisplatin (MAP)). The currently recommended treatments for Ewing sarcomas (for both localized and metastatic diseases) consist of multimodal approaches including surgery and/or radiotherapy associated to neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy, comprising respectively from 3 to 6, and then from 6 to 10 cycles. Doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, vincristine, dactinomycin and etoposide are considered as the most active substances. Current trials require combination chemotherapies, and most of them are based on the combination of 5-6 of these substances. Concerning chondrosarcomas, the treatment is adapted according to the subtype. Thus, the treatment regimen for mesenchymal chondrosarcomas and dedifferentiated chondrosarcomas differs. Indeed, an Ewing-type chemotherapy regimen is usually suggested to treat mesenchymal chondrosarcomas while dedifferentiated chondrosarcomas are often treated as high-grade bone sarcoma, with systemic and local therapies. Compared with surgery alone, multimodal treatment of high-grade sarcomas increases disease-free survival probabilities from only 10%-20% to 50-65% depending on the bone sarcoma type. In general, despite second-line treatment, the prognosis of recurrent disease has remained poor, with long-term post-relapse survival of \<20%. The outcome of bone sarcoma has been dramatically improved by the addition of chemotherapy in the 70' and 80' but has remained remarkably stable in the last 3 decades, with a survival rate largely plateaued, despite introduction of novel regimens, both in localized and metastatic disease, in children and in adults. Primary bone cancer presented challenges in new drug development partly because of their rarity and heterogeneity. Thus, improving treatments for these diseases is a high priority, but advances have been few in recent years. In this context, maintenance therapy may be an interesting option as a way to prolong the benefit of first-line chemotherapy. Regorafenib may play a role in the maintenance setting for bone sarcomas (as improved Progression-Free Survival and sustained responses were observed in the REGOBONE study) in maintaining the initial response to standard treatments and delaying the need for further treatment at relapse, while exerting a manageable associated toxicity and minimal negative impact on health-related quality of life. Currently there is no available agent used as maintenance therapy after first-line treatments. In the context of a clinical trial with close monitoring, it is, thus, acceptable to consider a placebo-control group. On this basis, this study propose to conduct a double-blinded randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of regorafenib versus placebo in the treatment of patients with bone sarcomas, who have no evidence of disease after standard multimodal treatments based on the histological subtype. The main goal of the present study is then to explore whether sequential addition of regorafenib after completion of a standard treatment in patients with bone sarcomas would improve outcomes in term of event-free-survival (EFS) defined by local or distant recurrence of the disease. Results will be stratified on the "high-risk" versus "low-risk" of relapse. As response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and metastatic status at time of diagnosis are known to be important on patient's outcome, stratification will rely on a combined criteria taking into account these two factors. Thus, "high-risk" of relapse will be defined by the group of patients who are poor responders to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and/or in metastatic setting at diagnosis, whereas "low-risk" of relapse will be defined by the group of patients who have no metastatic disease at time of diagnosis and are good responders to neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
168
Treatment for 13 cycles (12 months) maximum. During each cycle, patient will take once a day, during 21 days, followed by 7 days without treatment : * 3 tablets daily, corresponding to a total of 120 mg of Regorafenib (3 weeks out of 4 weeks) in patients ≥ 16 years old and patients \< 16 years old with BSA ≥ 1.70m²; * 2 tablets daily corresponding to a total of 80 mg of Regorafenib (3 weeks out of 4 weeks) in patients \< 16 years old with 1.30m² ≤ BSA \< 1.70m²;
Followed up patients in the exact same way as patients in the experimental arm
Hôpital Jean Minjoz
Besançon, France
RECRUITINGInstitut Bergonié
Bordeaux, France
RECRUITINGCentre Oscar Lambret
Lille, France
RECRUITINGCentre Léon Bérard
Lyon, France
RECRUITINGAPHM - Hôpital Timone
Marseille, France
RECRUITINGICM Val d'Aurelle
Montpellier, France
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGInstitut Curie
Paris, France
RECRUITINGAPHP Hôpital Cochin
Paris, France
RECRUITINGCentre Hospitalier Universitaire de Poitiers
Poitiers, France
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGCentre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint-Etienne (CHUSE)
Saint-Etienne, France
RECRUITING...and 6 more locations
Relapse-Free Survival (RFS)
RFS will be defined as the time from randomization to relapse, or death from any cause, whichever occurs first. Patients alive without relapse at the time of the analysis will be censored at the date of last tumour assessment. The Kaplan-Meier approach will be used to estimate median RFS for each study arm. The two-sided log-rank test, stratified on randomization stratification factors, will be used to compare RFS between the investigational arm and the control arm. The stratified Cox-regression (with proportional hazards) will be used to estimate the hazard ratio and to calculate the 95% confidence intervals of the hazard ratio.
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Time to Treatment Failure (TTF)
TTF will be defined as the time from the date of randomization to the date of permanent discontinuation of the study treatment, whichever is the cause. Patient not known to have withdrawn treatment before 12 months (study treatment duration) will be censored at the time of treatment stop. TTF survival will be estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and will be described in terms of medians along with the associated 2-sided 95% confidence interval for the estimates.
Time frame: Up to 1 year
Overall Survival (OS)
OS will be defined as the time from date of randomization to the date of death, from any cause. Patient not known to have died at the time of analysis will be censored based on the last recorded date on which the patient was known to be alive. OS survival will be estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and will be described in terms of medians along with the associated 2-sided 95% confidence interval for the estimates.
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Patient's Quality of Life (QoL)
The patient's Quality of Life will be assessed using the EORTC QLQ-C30. Scores will be calculated at each time point according to the scoring manuals. Descriptive statistics will be used to evaluate baseline scores and evolution of scores from baseline to each time point (Every 3 months since baseline, then every 4 months after second year surveillance). Data will be compared between arms using the Student's t-test. The QoL data will also be presented graphically if deemed relevant.
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Safety profile
The safety will be described mainly on the frequency of adverse events coded using the common toxicity criteria (NCI-CTCAE v5.0) grade. Descriptive statistics will be provided for characterizing and assessing patient tolerance to treatment. Adverse events will be coded according to the MedDRA®.
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Compliance To Treatment
The compliance to treatment will be described using the proportion of patients requiring dose reduction and temporary or permanent treatment discontinuation.
Time frame: Up to 1 year
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