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Trial Title:
Safety and Efficacy of Scheduled Intravesical Gemcitabine Versus Intravesical BCG for Intermediate and High Risk Non Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer: A Prospective, Randomized Study
NCT ID:
NCT05626101
Condition:
Non-muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Urinary Bladder Neoplasms
Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Neoplasms
Gemcitabine
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Primary purpose:
Treatment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
BCG
Description:
Intravsical induction and maintenance BCG injections.
Arm group label:
Inravesical BCG
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
Gemcitabine
Description:
Intravsical induction and maintenance gemcitabin injections.
Arm group label:
Inravesical Gemcitabin
Summary:
About 40%-80% of NMIBC recur within 6-12 months when managed with TURBT alone, and
10%-25% of the patient's progress to muscle invasive disease. Intravesical therapy
enables delivery of high local concentrations of a therapeutic agent within the bladder,
which could potentially destroy viable tumor cells that remain following TURBT
Detailed description:
Bladder cancer (BC) is the tenth most commonly diagnosed cancer worldwide. Approximately
75% of patients with BC present with disease confined to the mucosa (stage Ta or CIS) or
submucosa (stage T1); for younger patients (<40 year) this Percentage is even higher
(Babjuk et al., 2022).
About 40%-80% of NMIBC recur within 6-12 months when managed with TURBT alone, and
10%-25% of the patient's progress to muscle invasive disease. Intravesical therapy
enables delivery of high local concentrations of a therapeutic agent within the bladder,
which could potentially destroy viable tumor cells that remain following TURBT (Ye Z, et
al., 2018 and Daneshmand et al., 2022).
The Intravesical BCG injection can reduce the recurrence rate by about 30-40%. For
intravesical therapy, chemotherapy drugs such as mitomycin C, gemcitabine, and epirubicin
can be used post-TURBT, which is a good alternative treatment for BCG or a second-line
treatment (Ansari et al., 2022).
The BCG vaccine was firstly developed by Albert Calmette over a hundred years ago. Its
effect on bladder cancer was proposed by Dr. Alvaro Morales about forty years ago. In
1990, BCG was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of
NMIBC and then became the first-line drug in NMIBC up to now (Ansari et al., 2022).
Due to worldwide shortage of BCG, there is a clinical need to develop novel intravesical
agents and application forms in order to improve the oncological outcomes in non-muscle
invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). Gemcitabine has been investigated in various clinical
trials. It has proven to be superior to BCG re-challenge and mitomycin (MMC) in
BCG-unresponsive high-risk NMIBC (Gakis, 2022).
Gemcitabine is a nucleoside analogue with cytotoxic activity mediated by inhibition of
DNA synthesis followed by cell apoptosis. The majority of trials examining gemcitabine
have been in the setting of prior BCG failure (Balasubramanian et al., 2022).
NMIBC represents a significant global therapeutic challenge, particularly in the era of
international BCG shortage due to manufacturing issues. Induction and maintenance
intravesical BCG remains the historical gold standard for patients with intermediate or
high-risk NMIBC. However, clinicians may be forced to consider alternatives given the
current BCG shortage. Attempts to rationalize its use, including dose frequency
reduction, have resulted in inferior outcome. Accordingly, there is considerable interest
worldwide in assessing alternate approaches to improve oncologic outcomes for patients
with NMIBC (Balasubramanian et al., 2022).
The majority of trials examining gemcitabine have been in the setting of prior BCG
failure. To our knowledge there are only four trials evaluating initial intravesical
gemcitabine without prior BCG usage. Porena et al., 2010 included only 32 patients;
Bendary et al. 2011 included 40 patients; Gontero et al., 2013 included 61 patients and
Prasanna et al., 2017 included 51 patients. Depending on this fact, we need a
well-designed prospective trial including a large number of patients with reasonable
follow-up period to estimate the actual benefits and hazards of intravesical gemcitabine
injection.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- The study will include moderate and high risk patients with NMIBC. Very high risk
NMIBC patients, whom refusing radical cystectomy.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Active UTI.
- Suspected bladder perforation.
- Hematuria.
- Any contraindications for gemcitabin therapy; hypersenstivity, pregnancy, an
infection, hemolytic uremic syndrome, , anemia, decreased blood platelets, low
levels of a type of white blood cell called neutrophils.
- Patients whom previously received any inravesical therapy (e.g. prior BCG).
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
N/A
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Mohamed Fawzy Salman
Address:
City:
Cairo
Country:
Egypt
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Mohamed Fawzy Salman, MD
Phone:
+201111788996
Email:
prof_mohamed_fawzy@yahoo.com
Investigator:
Last name:
Aboelfotoh A Aboelfoth, MD
Email:
Principal Investigator
Start date:
January 1, 2021
Completion date:
October 11, 2024
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Al-Azhar University
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Al-Azhar University
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05626101