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Study Using Intensity-modulated Radiation Therapy in Patients With Nasopharynx Cancer to Permit Sparing of Contralateral Parotid Gland Function

2010年2月8日 更新者:Alberta Health services

A Phase I/II Feasibility Study Using Intensity-modulated Radiation Therapy in Patients With Nasopharynx Cancer to Permit Sparing of Contralateral Parotid Gland Function

One of the side effects of standard radiation therapy for cancer of the nasopharynx is a permanent lessening of normal mouth moisture (saliva). This reduction in saliva is important because it causes a feeling of dry mouth, and has been shown to increase the risk of dental cavities and infections; change or decrease the ability to taste certain foods; and make chewing and swallowing food more difficult. Recent technical advances in radiation therapy offer the possibility of shielding a portion of one of the major salivary glands (parotid gland) from receiving a dose of radiation that would eliminate its ability to produce saliva, while still treating all sites of known cancer effectively. Recently, cancer researchers in Ann Arbor, Michigan used this new treatment technique to treat patients with head and neck cancers (but none with nasopharyngeal cancer), and found that patients treated in this manner still had significant saliva production from the spared gland. This study will try to use the treatment planning technique called intensity-modulated radiation therapy to protect a portion of one parotid gland while treating all known and suspected areas of cancer to full radiation doses.

研究概览

详细说明

Radiotherapy is the primary treatment modality for patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma, with local control being directly related to dose and to the technical accuracy with which the dose is delivered to the target volume. Treatment planning for nasopharyngeal carcinoma is complicated by the presence of many critical structures (spinal cord, brainstem, temporal lobe, optic chiasm and nerves, parotid glands, etc.) adjacent to the primary target volume (primary cancer), which itself requires a higher prescription dose for good probability of local control than the tolerance doses for any of these adjacent organs at risk. Conventional, traditional radiotherapy has therefore involved treating the adjacent organs at risk to tolerance (e.g. spinal cord) or even above tolerance (e.g. parotid gland) to achieve a reasonable chance of locoregional control, leaving the patient with significant acute and late normal tissue toxicity that impacts both ability to tolerate the actual treatment and on the patient's long-term quality of life. Recently, static conformal multisegmental intensity modulated radiotherapy for comprehensive irradiation of head and neck cancer with dose sparing of uninvolved tissues has been reported (Eisbruch et al., 1996). These authors have demonstrated substantial preservation of major salivary gland function using these techniques for primary sites in the oral pharynx, oral cavity, epiglottic larynx and pyriform sinus, which would be expected to significantly improve long-term quality of life, as a permanent xerostomia is the most prevalent late side effect of irradiation for head and neck cancers and is cited by patients as the major cause of decreased quality of life reported. To date, these techniques have not been described in the published literature for nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Such techniques offer the possibility of significant improvement in normal tissue toxicity, while maintaining possibly better rates of local control due to improved target localization. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate whether the intensity modulated radiotherapy can reduce the incidence of permanent xerostomia in N0 and N1 nasopharynx cancer patients by sparing the contralateral parotid gland, while delivering full dose to all known and suspected areas of disease. Patients on study will receive 70 Gy given in 2 Gy once daily fractionation five days a week to all grossly involved areas, and 50 Gy given in 2 Gy once daily fractionation five days a week to areas at 15% or more risk of subclinical microscopic involvement. Patients will have subjective and objective assessment of salivary gland function done prior to, during, and after radiotherapy. Toxicity evaluation using the acute and chronic RTOG grading scales will be done. The primary endpoint of this study is the frequency of grade 2 chronic salivary gland toxicity. Correlation between toxicity and quality of life will be assessed. The hypothesis that the use of IMRT can reduce grade 2 or worse chronic xerostomia by 50% relatively will be tested. The required sample size for 90% statistical power and one-sided type one error of 0.05 is 13 patients. This assumes that the contralateral parotid sparing approach will have 40% grade 2 or more chronic xerostomia, whereas the population of conventionally treated nasopharynx patients has 80% grade 2 or more chronic xerostomia. Additional patients are added for possible ineligibility and inevaluability. A total of 18 patients will be accrued for this study. A significant survival advantage to concurrent cisplatin-based chemoradiation plus adjuvant chemotherapy for nasopharyngeal cancer was demonstrated recently in the published results of Intergroup Study 0099 (Al-Sarrf et al., 1998) but this study used conventional radiotherapy techniques that did not incorporate recent refinements to radiation planning now available using image-guided beam's-eye-view modeling and 3-dimensional dose distributions. For the purposes of this study, concurrent chemoradiation and adjuvant chemotherapy as per the experimental arm of Intergroup Study 0099 will be considered standard management, so that patients who accepted this treatment would be eligible for this study.

研究类型

介入性

注册

25

阶段

  • 阶段2
  • 阶段1

联系人和位置

本节提供了进行研究的人员的详细联系信息,以及有关进行该研究的地点的信息。

学习地点

    • Alberta
      • Edmonton、Alberta、加拿大、T6G 1Z2
        • Cross Cancer Institute

参与标准

研究人员寻找符合特定描述的人,称为资格标准。这些标准的一些例子是一个人的一般健康状况或先前的治疗。

资格标准

适合学习的年龄

18年 及以上 (成人、年长者)

接受健康志愿者

有资格学习的性别

全部

描述

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Epithelial carcinoma of the nasopharynx, oral cavity, oropharynx, larynx, or hypopharynx

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Previous therapy for carcinoma of head/neck

学习计划

本节提供研究计划的详细信息,包括研究的设计方式和研究的衡量标准。

研究是如何设计的?

设计细节

  • 主要用途:治疗
  • 分配:非随机化
  • 介入模型:单组作业
  • 屏蔽:无(打开标签)

研究衡量的是什么?

主要结果指标

结果测量
rate of grade 2 xerostomia

次要结果测量

结果测量
可行性

合作者和调查者

在这里您可以找到参与这项研究的人员和组织。

调查人员

  • 首席研究员:Matthew Parliament, MD、Cross Cancer Institute

出版物和有用的链接

负责输入研究信息的人员自愿提供这些出版物。这些可能与研究有关。

研究记录日期

这些日期跟踪向 ClinicalTrials.gov 提交研究记录和摘要结果的进度。研究记录和报告的结果由国家医学图书馆 (NLM) 审查,以确保它们在发布到公共网站之前符合特定的质量控制标准。

研究主要日期

学习开始

2000年1月1日

研究注册日期

首次提交

2005年7月22日

首先提交符合 QC 标准的

2005年7月25日

首次发布 (估计)

2005年7月26日

研究记录更新

最后更新发布 (估计)

2010年2月9日

上次提交的符合 QC 标准的更新

2010年2月8日

最后验证

2005年7月1日

更多信息

此信息直接从 clinicaltrials.gov 网站检索,没有任何更改。如果您有任何更改、删除或更新研究详细信息的请求,请联系 register@clinicaltrials.gov. clinicaltrials.gov 上实施更改,我们的网站上也会自动更新.

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