A majority of oral cancer patients in India present in the advanced stage hence tend to have poor oncological outcomes. Chemotherapy has been associated with improved oncological outcomes in various cancers but its role in oral cancer is not well defined in curative setting apart from radio sensitization. Attempted trials of neoadjuvant chemotherapy failed to show oncological advantage despite an excellent response rate, in part due to poor patient selection. Patients with a biologically aggressive disease are more likely to benefit, hence we intend to find out the oncological advantage of adding induction chemotherapy to oral squamous cell cancer with advanced nodal disease (N2-N3). Earlier studies suffered from their heterogeneous patient population- all head and neck subsites together and included a spectrum ranging from early- stage operable cases to inoperable cancer. Due to such patient selection, the intended results were never met. The current study is intended to study the role of chemotherapy in curable patients who are most likely to benefit (biologically aggressive and advanced stage of presentation). Objective Primary: To study the 2 year disease free survival by adding induction chemotherapy before surgery in patients of oral cancer with advanced nodal disease as compared to upfront surgery. Secondary: To assess treatment related outcomes between the treatment arms- Response rate; Treatment compliance; treatment related toxicity, postoperative complications and Quality of life. To study the overall survival at 2 years. Oral cancer tissue biobanking for future translational research. Study population Operable Oral cavity Squamous cell carcinoma with advanced nodal disease (N2-N3) Study Design Open label, Multi centric, randomized controlled trial with allocation ratio of 1:1 Sample Size The primary end point is disease-free survival. In order to have 80% power to detect a hazard ratio of 0.67, using a two-sided significance level, a total of 184 events are needed. Assuming an accrual rate of 15 patients a month, 300 patients need to be recruited. The analysis of DFS will take place 32 months after the start of the trial. The follow-up of patients will continue for 5 years. The analysis of OS will be conducted when 184 deaths are observed. taking 10% of withdrawal of consent, a total of 346 patients need to be included. Inclusion Criteria Biopsy proven, operable oral Squamous cell carcinoma cT1-T4; cN2-N3, with adequate organ function, Age- 18-75 years, ECOG-PS:0-2 Treatment Arms Standard Arm (SURG arm): Surgery (Wide local Excision/composite resection with neck dissection) followed by adjuvant Radiotherapy ± Concurrent Chemotherapy Experimental Arm (ICT): 2# TPF or TPX based induction chemotherapy followed by Surgery (Wide local Excision/composite resection with neck dissection) followed by adjuvant Radiotherapy ± Concurrent Chemotherapy Study endpoints Primary- Disease free survival Secondary- Overall survival/ Quality of life/ Toxicity of treatment/ Treatment tolerance
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
346
TPF: IINJ DOCETAXEL 75mg/M2 in 500 ML NORMAL SALINE(PVC free container/glass bottle) via codon filter OVER 60 MIN (DAY 1 ONLY) INJ. CISPLATIN 75 MG/M 2 IN 500 ML NS IV OVER 1 HOUR ON DAY1 ONLY INJ. 5FU 750 MG/M2 IV THROUGH INFUSION PUMP OVER 24 HOURS D 1-4 Or TPX Regimen INJ DOCETAXEL 75mg/M2 in 500 ML NORMAL SALINE(PVC free container/glass bottle) via codon filter OVER 60 MIN (DAY 1 ONLY) INJ. CISPLATIN 75 MG/M 2 IN 500 ML NS IV OVER 1 HOUR ON D1 ONLY TAB. CAPECITABINE 850-1000MG/M2 TWICE A DAY 30 MINUTES AFTER MEALS FOR 14 DAYS IN A THREE WEEKLY CYCLE Surgery and Adjuvant Treatment Patients with PR/CR or SD will go for surgical resection. Patients having PD but still localized and resectable will be offered surgical resection, other would undergo radical CTRT or Palliative Treatment.
Wide Local Excision (WLE) with Comprehensive neck dissection and Adjuvant Treatment as per current standard Guidelines.
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bhubaneshwar
Bhubaneshwar, Orisa, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGAll India Institute of Medical Sciences, Jodhpur
Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
RECRUITINGAll India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda
Bathinda, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGShri Mahant Indresh Hospital, Dehradun
Dehradun, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGKing George's Medical University
Lucknow, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGAll India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rishikesh
Rishikesh, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGGeetanjali Medical College, Udaipur
Udaipur, India
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGDisease Free Survival
Date of randomization to the date of clinical or pathological evidence of recurrence
Time frame: 2 Years
Overall Survival
Date of randomization to the date of death due to any reason.
Time frame: 2 Years
Treatment Completion Rate
Number of Participants completing the treatment
Time frame: 2 Years
Treatment Related Toxicity
Chemotherapy Related and Radiotherapy Related: Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE v5.0)
Time frame: 2 Years
Quality of Life using PROs
FACT HN Scale
Time frame: 3 Months; 6 Months; 12 Months; 18 Months; 24 Months; 36 Months; 48 Months; 60 Months
Postoperative Surgical Morbidity
Clavien Dindo Scale
Time frame: 30 Days and 90 Days
Biobanking of Tumor, Non Tumor tissue and Blood
DNA Sequencing using NGS to assess the genetic alterations
Time frame: 2 Years
Financial Toxicity using Questionnaire
FACT Scale
Time frame: 3 Months; 6 Months; 12 Months; 18 Months; 24 Months; 36 Months; 48 Months; 60 Months
Early Radiotherapy Related Toxicity
RTOG Criteria
Time frame: 30 Days
Late Radiotherapy Relate Toxicity
RTOG Criteria
Time frame: 2 Years
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