Trial Title:
Neoadjuvant PRRT With Y-90-DOTATOC in pNET
NCT ID:
NCT05568017
Condition:
Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumor
Conditions: Official terms:
Neuroendocrine Tumors
Adenoma, Islet Cell
Edotreotide
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
Phase 2
Overall status:
Unknown status
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Single Group Assignment
Intervention model description:
Patients affected by unresectable or borderline resectable P-NETs and limited liver
disease will be enrolled
Primary purpose:
Other
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
peptide receptor radionuclide therapy with Y-90-DOTATOC
Description:
Patients with unresectable or borderline resectable pNETs will recive PRRT with
90Y-DOTATOC
Arm group label:
Y-90-DOTATOC
Other name:
PRRT
Other name:
Y-90-DOTATOC
Summary:
Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are relatively rare tumors, mainly originating from the
digestive system, that tend to be slow growing and are often diagnosed when metastatic.
Surgery is the sole curative option, but is feasible only in a minority of patients.
Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT) has been experimented for almost 20 years
and is an established effective therapeutic modality for well/moderately differentiated,
inoperable or metastasized gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) and bronchial NETs. Clinical
studies demonstrated that partial and complete objective responses can be obtained in up
to 30% of patients. Side effects may involve the kidneys and the bone marrow and are
usually mild. Renal protection is used to minimize the risk of a late decrease of renal
function.
A new application for P-NETs is preoperative PRRT. Since surgery is the only curative
option for GEPNETs, preoperative PRRT could increase the efficacy of surgery. However,
this modality has not been fully explored in dedicated studies and there are just few
sporadic case reports that described the preoperative use of PRRT in pancreatic NETs who
could then be operated on successfully. Moreover there are few experiences demonstrating
the advantage of PRRT associated to surgery in a multidisciplinary setting. In addition,
the possibility of detecting the circulating NET transcripts by means of transcriptome
analysis could represent an early marker of response to PRRT and improve the patient
management.
Aim of this study is to evaluate the response and rate of R0 surgery in patients with
unresectable or borderline resectable PNETs eligible to PRRT with 90Y-DOTATOC and
correlate the response to the variation in circulating NET transcripts measured before
and after the end of PRRT. It has been recently shown that a PCR-based 51 transcript
signature is significantly more sensitive and efficient than single analytes (e.g. CgA)
in NET diagnosis and follow up.
30 patients will be enrolled in the study; each of them will receive 1.85 GBq/cycle of
90Y-DOTATOC with a cumulative activity of 9.25-11.1 GBq in 5-6 cycles (depending on
personalized dosimetry). Therapy response will be assessed by morphological (CT/MRI) and
functional (PET/CT or Octreoscan) imaging after 3 and 6 months from the completion of
PRRT and compared with transcript analysis.
Based on literature reports we expect a response rate of about 35% of patients.
Detailed description:
GEP-NETs tend to be slow growing (although aggressive forms exist) and are often
diagnosed when they have already metastasized, when a radical treatment is no longer
possible.
Treatment of NETs is typically multidisciplinary and should be individualized according
to tumor type, burden, and symptoms. Therapeutic tools include surgery, interventional
radiology and medical treatments such as somatostatin analogues, interferon,
chemotherapy, new targeted drugs and peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) with
radiolabeled somatostatin analogues [Modlin 2008]. Several clinical trials have indicated
that PRRT with somatostatin analogues 90Y-DOTATOC, 177Lu-DOTATATE and 177Lu-DOTATOC, is
an efficient tool in the management of NETs (30% objective responses with a great
survival benefit) which compares favorably to classic chemotherapy results (up to 20%
responses) [Kwekkeboom 2005].
Dosimetric studies demonstrated that these radiopeptides are able to deliver high
radiation doses to somatostatin receptor sst2-expressing tumors and acceptable doses to
normal organs [Cremonesi 2010]. Side effects, usually mild, may involve kidneys and bone
marrow. Renal protection is used to minimize the risk of a late function decrease [Bodei
2003].
Pts are selected for PRRT based on molecular imaging with 111In-pentetreotide or, more
recently, a 68Ga-SSA-PET, such as 68Ga-DOTATOC/DOTATATE/DOTANOC [Virgolini 2010], which
have revolutionized the NET imaging, with an overall sensitivity of >90%, and specificity
ranging from 92% to 98% [Ambrosini 2012].
PRRT is an innovative therapeutic approach for inoperable or metastasized,
well/moderately differentiated GEP and bronchial NETs. PRRT in P-NETs has demonstrated
efficacy in terms of objective response and impact on survival parameters. Since surgery
is the only curative option for patients with GEP-NETs, it is proposed that neoadjuvant
treatment will improve outcome by enabling disease regression that will enable surgical
resection.
Identification of disease regression as assessed by a PCR-blood based analysis of
circulating neuroendocrine tumor transcripts will provide objective and quantifiable
molecular genomic early information that is additive to imaging criteria of regression.
This will objectively establish PRRT treatment efficacy and thereby facilitate the
identification and selection of individuals that would then benefit from surgical
intervention.
The two most commonly used radiopeptides, 90Y-DOTATOC and 177Lu-DOTATATE, produce overall
objective response rates of 15-35%. Particularly relevant is the outcome in terms of both
progression-free and overall survivals, which compare favorably with biotherapies. PRRT
is generally well tolerated with mild toxicity, if the necessary precautions, such as the
co-administration of nephron-protective amino acids or the adjustment of the administered
activity, are taken.
PRRT in P-NETs has demonstrated efficacy in terms of objective response and impact on
survival parameters. Response rates are >35%, higher than in small intestine tumors. In
particular, in 342 patients with P-NETs, out of the whole series of 1109 patients treated
with 90Y-DOTATOC, 47% objective responses were reported by Imhof in 2011. In 2013,
Sansovini reported 39% partial and complete responses using 177Lu-DOTATATE at full
dosage, while 60.3% partial responses were reported by Ezziddin in 2014 using the same
peptide. Reported progression free survival (PFS) rates are > 30 months.
An interesting new application for P-NETs is the neoadjuvant setting, which was suggested
by sporadic case reports that described the successful surgical resection in patients
with initially inoperable P-NETs treated with PRRT. However, this treatment modality has
not been fully explored in dedicated studies.
Moreover, there are few experiences demonstrating the advantage of PRRT associated to
surgery in a multidisciplinary setting [Bertani 2014, 2016].
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients affected by unresectable or borderline resectable P-NETs and limited liver
disease
- Multidisciplinary evaluation in which a global therapy approach is proposed with
PRRT in a neoadjuvant setting.
- Histopathologic diagnosis of WHO G1/G2 P-NET
- Conserved hematological, liver and renal parameters: hemoglobin >/= 10 g/dL,
absolute neutrophil count (ANC) >/= 1.5 x 109 /L, platelets >/= 100 x 109 /L,
bilirubin = 1.5 X UNL (upper normal limit), ALT < 2.5 X UNL (< 5 X UNL in presence
of liver metastases), creatinine < 2 mg/dL.
- Age more than 18 years.
- Patients with documented disease will be admitted to therapeutic phase only if the
diagnostic receptor imaging (Ga-68-peptides PET/CT or OctreoScan) demonstrate a
significant uptake in the tumor (grade 2 or 3, according to a preset scoring, where
grade 1= equal to normal liver, grade2 = higher than normal liver, grade 3= higher
than kidneys and spleen), that may allow delivering a low absorbed dose to normal
organs and a high dose to the tumor [Cremonesi 1999, Cremonesi 2010].
- Disease must be measurable by means of conventional imaging (CT or MRI)
- Before treatment clinical history data will be collected, physical examination will
be performed and diagnostic and laboratory data will be examined.
- Patients must not receive other treatments (e.g. chemo- or radiotherapy) from one
month before to two months after the completion of 90Y-DOTATOC cycles.
- Patients must be naive from previous radionuclide treatments with radiopeptides
(e.g. 111Inpentetreotide, Lu-177-petides) or other radiopharmaceuticals (e.s.
131I-MIBG, 131I).
Exclusion Criteria:
-
- Pregnancy/breastfeeding (a pregnancy test not older than 7 days is mandatory).
- Assessed bone marrow invasion > 25%.
- Other concomitant neoplasm (excluding in situ basaliomas and radically treated
cervical cancers).
- ECOG score higher than 2.
- Expectancy of life shorter than 6 months.
- Patients with psycho-physical conditions that are not suitable for entering this
clinical study and fulfilling its requirements.
- No multidisciplinary indication to surgery after PRRT
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Chiara Maria Grana
Address:
City:
Milano
Zip:
20141
Country:
Italy
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Chiara M Grana, MD
Phone:
+390257489044
Email:
chiara.grana@ieo.it
Contact backup:
Last name:
Emilio Bertani, MD
Phone:
+390257489001
Email:
emilio.bertani@ieo.it
Facility:
Name:
Chiara Maria Grana
Address:
City:
Milano
Zip:
20141
Country:
Italy
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Chiara M Grana
Phone:
+390257489044
Email:
chiara.grana@ieo.it
Start date:
September 15, 2020
Completion date:
November 30, 2023
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
European Institute of Oncology
Agency class:
Other
Collaborator:
Agency:
Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco
Agency class:
Other
Source:
European Institute of Oncology
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05568017