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Living Donor Liver Transplantation for Unresectable Colorectal Cancer Liver Metastases

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Colorectal Cancer
Liver Metastases
Interventions
Procedure: live donor liver transplantation
Registration Number
NCT02864485
Lead Sponsor
University Health Network, Toronto
Brief Summary

Patients with unresectable liver metastases (LM) from colorectal cancer (CRC)have a poor prognosis. In patients with resectable disease, surgery offers a distinct survival benefit. This study will offer live donor liver transplantation (LDLT) to select patients with unresectable metastases that are 1) limited to the liver and 2) stable (non-progressing) on standard chemotherapy. Potential participants will be evaluated for liver transplant suitability and must also have a willing, healthy living donor come forward for evaluation. Those participants who undergo LDLT will be followed for survival, disease-free survival and quality of life for 5 years and compared to a "control group" of participants who drop out of study prior to transplantation due to reasons other than cancer progression.

Detailed Description

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. Approximately half of all patients develop metastases, often to the liver or lung. Surgical treatment of liver metastases (LM) is the only curative treatment option; however, it has been estimated that only 20-40% of patients are candidates for liver resection. Surgery offers a distinct survival advantage: the 5-year survival after liver resection for LM is around 40-50% in most studies versus 10-20% 5-year survival for chemotherapy alone.

In cases where the colorectal metastases are isolated to the liver but "unresectable", the total hepatectomy resulting from liver transplantation would remove all evident disease. CRC LM are considered an absolute contraindication for liver transplantation (LT) at most centers but recent reports of LT for colorectal LM from a single center in Oslo, Norway demonstrated a 5-year survival of 56%. The Norway study was not stringent about inclusion criteria or pre-transplant chemotherapy, and transplanted patients whose tumors were actively growing. As a result many participants developed disease recurrence quite rapidly following transplant. The investigators hypothesize that tighter criteria would result in improved outcomes.

Unfortunately, with a lack of deceased donor grafts for the investigators existing transplant patients, the investigators cannot utilize decease donor grafts for this study. Therefore the investigators will explore Living Donor Liver Transplantation (LDLT). Furthermore, LDLT is an elective surgery, allowing for more control over pre-transplant chemotherapy and tumor monitoring. This study will offer live donor liver transplantation (LDLT) to select patients with unresectable metastases that are 1) limited to the liver and 2) stable (non-progressing) on standard chemotherapy. Potential participants will be evaluated for liver transplant suitability and must also have a willing, healthy living donor come forward for evaluation. Those participants who undergo LDLT will be followed for survival, disease-free survival and quality of life for 5 years and compared to a "control group" of participants who drop out of study prior to transplantation due to reasons other than cancer progression.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria
  • Must reside in Canada
  • ECOG ( Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group) score : 0-1 at all times prior to LDLT (excursions to ECOG 2 allowed at investigator's discretion)
  • Proven colorectal Liver Metastases (LM).
  • Willing and able to provide written informed consent.
  • Negative serum pregnancy test for women of childbearing potential
  • Both men and women must agree to use adequate barrier birth control measures during the course of the trial.
  • At least 1 "acceptable", ABO-compatible living donor has stepped forward
  • Primary Colorectal cancer tumor stage is ≤T4a
  • Time from primary CRC resection to transplant is ≥6 months
  • Bilateral and non-resectable LM
  • No major vascular invasion by LM; metastases isolated to liver
  • The patient has undergone systemic chemotherapy (eg. FOLFOX +/- bevacizumab or FOLFIRI +/- bevacizumab) for ≥3 months
  • demonstrated stability or regression of LM over at minimum the 3 months preceding screening
  • Carcinoembryonic Antigen (CEA) values are stable or decreasing at all timepoints prior to the transplant surgery.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Previous or concurrent cancer (with some exceptions)
  • prior lung resection
  • Progression of LM at any timepoint prior to transplant surgery
  • Renal dysfunction with an estimated creatinine clearance of less than 50 ml/min
  • Pulmonary insufficiency
  • History of cardiac disease
  • Known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection or chronic hepatitis B and/or C infection.
  • Patients with debilitating neuropathy. (CTCAE > grade 2)
  • BRAF + tumors
  • Any condition that is unstable or which could jeopardize the safety of the patient and his/her compliance in the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
transplantationlive donor liver transplantationLive donor liver transplantation for the treatment of unresectable colorectal cancer liver metastases
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
disease-free survival5 years
patient survival5 years
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
self-reported quality of life as assessed by EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire6 month intervals for 5 years

Compare the QoL of participants undergoing intervention vs participants that drop-out (for non cancer related reasons and are thereafter receiving palliative chemotherapy)

survival of intervention vs standard treatment1-, 3- and 5 years

Compare the 1-, 3- and 5- year survival of patients that undergo intervention with those that drop-out of the study (due to non-cancer related reasons and receive standard chemotherapy)

disease-free survival3 years
patterns of cancer recurrence after liver transplantation5 years
types of cancer recurrence treatments5 years
Number of participants that drop out of study prior to receiving intervention (transplantation surgery) due to chemotherapy-related adverse events, as assessed by CTCAE v4.0prior to liver transplantation
patient survival3 years

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Toronto General Hospital

🇨🇦

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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