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Trial Title:
De-escalation of Adjuvant Radiation for Low-Risk HPV Oropharyngeal Cancers
NCT ID:
NCT06554158
Condition:
Oropharynx Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Oropharyngeal Neoplasms
Conditions: Keywords:
HPV
tonsil
base of tongue
soft palate
oropharyngeal cancer
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Single Group Assignment
Primary purpose:
Treatment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Radiation
Intervention name:
Radiation Therapy
Description:
De-escalation of Adjuvant Radiotherapy
Arm group label:
treatment arm
Summary:
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether for intermediate-risk patients who
have undergone Transoral Robotic Surgery for HPV/p16(+) oropharyngeal cancer and have
minimal smoking history, whether these patients can be treated with a lower-than standard
dose, with omission of the primary site in the oropharynx. The main questions it aims to
answer are:
Does radiotherapy site and dose-de-escalation lead to similar outcomes compared to
historical data on tumor control in patients who are treated with standard radiation
doses and treatment fields?
Participants will:
Undergo treatment with a lower than standard radiation dose (50Gy in 25 fractions, with
either IMRT or proton beam therapy) and to a smaller than standard radiation field (to
the neck only, excluding the original site of tumor in the oropharynx)
Detailed description:
HPV+ oropharyngeal carcinoma can be treated with either definitive radiotherapy or
transoral surgery (TOS, using a predominantly robotic or laser approach), with equivalent
oncologic results.23 The proportion of patients who receive definitive radiotherapy or
TOS followed by adjuvant radiotherapy (in over 80% of patients) has roughly reached
parity. At large academic centers with significant head and neck cancer expertise, the
decision to treat with either definitive radiation or TOS followed by adjuvant
radiotherapy is driven by non-oncologic considerations most often dictated by anatomic
factors such as the presence of a retropharyngeal internal carotid artery, proximity of
nodal disease to the carotid artery, involvement of the soft palate, or patient ability
to tolerate resection. None of these factors would be expected to affect the probability
of oncologic outcomes.
In addition to definitive radiation, the introduction of improved surgical techniques has
allowed select patients with oropharyngeal cancer to undergo resection of the primary
disease as well as dissection of neck disease as part of their treatment regimen. The
utilization of TOS with neck dissection is followed by observation, radiation or
chemoradiation based on standard pathologic risk factors such as the presence of
perineural invasion, lymphovascular space invasion, close or involved margins, T3-T4
disease, or the presence of multiple involved lymph nodes .24 25 Since over 50% of
patients who are treated with TOS are treated with adjuvant radiation utilizing
concurrent chemotherapy based on pathologic factors, and over 80% of patients treated
with primary TOS are treated with adjuvant radiation of some form, it is important to
consider deintensifying treatment for patients with good prognosis cancers.
The most commonly utilized dose in this clinical situation is 60Gy in 30 fractions;
however, this is based on literature from smoking-related cancers that suggest that
57.6Gy in 32 fractions would be an acceptable dose for patients with high-risk disease
(Peters et al,).
Treatment with adjuvant therapy for TOS patients has involved several deintensification
approaches, depending on pathologic factors. Approaches for de-escalation can include
decreasing the treatment volume, decreasing radiation dose, or excluding chemotherapy in
patients with extracapsular extension.
The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group ECOG 3311 trial, a phase II randomized study of
TOS patients with HPV(+) oropharyngeal cancers is studying dose de-escalation from 60Gy
to 50Gy in intermediate-risk patients receiving adjuvant IMRT radiation, but has not yet
reported its results. Another approach in the postoperative setting has been using
chemotherapy to decrease the dose of radiation used; the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota has
reported the use of docetaxel and cisplatin chemotherapy with low-dose radiation (twice
daily radiation to 30-36Gy in 20 fractions) without any unexpected recurrences in 80
patients, with locoregional control of 95% and distant control of 94%.
For patients with extracapsular extension (ECE), the addition of concurrent chemotherapy
to adjuvant radiation has not shown a benefit in a retrospective series of 152
patients.28 In fact, the aforementioned ECOG 3311 phase II trial of radiotherapy dose
de-escalation for adjuvant patients excludes chemotherapy for all these patients, and is
de-escalating radiation dose down to 50Gy in this population. A similar approach in
patient with ECE ≤1mm is being taken in the SIRS trial from Mt. Sinai with an expected
enrollment of 200 patients, which entails de-escalating radiation dose to 50Gy without
chemotherapy. The PATHOS trial from the UK will be doing a direct comparison of patients
with ECE >1mm, looking at whether chemotherapy can be omitted from this population of
higher-risk patients who have predominantly more extensive ECE.
There is no study which we are currently aware that combines the concept of omission of
the primary site from the radiation therapy field with dose de-escalation to the nodal
bed at risk. A study that combines these concepts found in the literature as well as
current clinical trials would therefore be novel and could have a significant of
quality-of-life benefit for patients if found to be effective.
A prospective phase II trial at the University of Pennsylvania of 60 patients omitting
the primary resection bed while treating the nodal basin with standard doses of adjuvant
radiation has demonstrated excellent control rates.33 With 2-year mean follow-up, local
control was 98%, regional control 100%, and distant control was 97% Patients were treated
to a standard dose of 60-63 Gy. Excluding the primary site led to 1 recurrence in the 60
patients, which was successfully salvaged via surgical resection. There was a 2%
gastrostomy dependence rate in this population.
Radiation will involve with a lower than standard radiation dose (50Gy in 25 fractions,
with either IMRT or proton beam therapy) and to a smaller than standard radiation field
(to the neck only, excluding the original site of tumor in the oropharynx).
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients must be ≥ 18 years of age on the day of signing informed consent.
- Patients must have a diagnosis of p16+ and/or HPV+ squamous cell carcinoma of the
oropharynx (including base of tongue, glossotonsilar sulcus, tonsil, soft palate,
vallecula, and/or posterior oropharyngeal wall).
- pathologic stage T1-2 N1 M0 (AJCC 8th ed.) stage I or T3 N0-1 M0 stage II (AJCC 8th
ed.) SCCA of the oropharynx, with ≤ 5 distinct nodes involved with tumor, ≤ 2mm ECE,
≥ 2mm surgical margins at primary site.
- KPS ≥ 60 within 8 weeks prior to registration.
- neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio ≤ 5 within 8 weeks of registration.
- hemoglobin count ≥ 10 within 8 weeks of registration. The patient may receive
transfusion to reach this goal.
- current non-smoker (at least 6 months) with ≤ 15 pack-year smoking history
- start radiation within 8 weeks of resection (6 weeks preferable)
- have undergone resection of the primary site with Transoral Surgery and neck
dissection of at least the ipsilateral neck
Exclusion Criteria:
- Perineural invasion at primary site
- Lymphovascular space invasion at primary site
- Retropharyngeal nodal involvement (even if resected)
- any intact, unresected disease
- nodal disease pathologically invading adjacent neck musculature
- Patients treated via an invasive, non-oral approach to the primary site, including
jaw-splitting mandibulotomy with resection or lateral pharyngotomy
- Prior history of malignancy diagnosed within 2 years prior to registration, except
for nonmelanomatous skin cancer that has completed treatment and the patient is
deemed as being disease-free or Gleason 6 prostate cancer that is undergoing active
surveillance.
- Patient with extracapsular extension (ECE) who has not had a biopsy of an
ipsilateral neck lymph node that demonstrated squamous cell carcinoma
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Medstar Georgetown University Hospital
Address:
City:
Washington
Zip:
20007
Country:
United States
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Lila Sisbarro
Phone:
202-687-4135
Email:
ls1302@georgetown.edu
Contact backup:
Last name:
Nicole Swanson
Email:
ns1209@georgetown.edu
Start date:
August 1, 2019
Completion date:
December 31, 2028
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Georgetown University
Agency class:
Other
Collaborator:
Agency:
MedStar Georgetown University Hospital
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Georgetown University
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06554158