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Clinical Trials/NCT03886441
NCT03886441
Unknown
Phase 2

A Randomized, Open Phase II Study of the Incidence and Safety of Radiation Pneumonia in Patients With Locally Advanced NSCLC Treated With Beclomethasone Propionate Inhaled During Radical Radiotherapy Compared With Conventional Radiotherapy

Tongji University1 site in 1 country194 target enrollmentApril 1, 2019

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Beclomethasone propionate
Conditions
Locally Advanced Non Small Cell Lung Cancer
Sponsor
Tongji University
Enrollment
194
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Incidence of radiation pneumonia between two groups of patients
Last Updated
7 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Radical radiotherapy is the main treatment of locally advanced lung cancer, and radiation pneumonia is the main toxic effects of radiotherapy. Among them, the fatality rate of severe radiation pneumonia can reach 50%, which is very harmful to tumor patients. At present, the treatment mode of radiation pneumonia is very few, and the therapeutic effect is poor. The prevention of radiation pneumonitis may be the best way to reduce the number of patients with Post-radiotherapy pneumonia. Previous small clinical studies have shown that the incidence of radiation pneumonia in inhaled beclomethasone group (2 /28) was significantly lower than that in oral prednisone group (8 /29) during radiotherapy. The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of radiotherapy between the therapeutic group (inhaled beclomethasone during radiotherapy) and the control radiotherapy group (patients received radiotherapy only), especially the incidence of radiation-induced pneumonia within half a year.

Detailed Description

To compare the incidence of radiation pneumonia, effect and side effects of radiotherapy in lung between beclomethasone inhalation therapeutic group and control radiotherapy group in patients with locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) during radiotherapy.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
April 1, 2019
End Date
December 30, 2020
Last Updated
7 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Tongji University
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Caicun Zhou

Professor, doctor

Tongji University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • The subjects understood the requirements and risks of the study fully and signed the informed consent form.
  • Aged between 18 and 70 years;
  • Histologically or cytologically confirmed diagnosis of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer.
  • All of these patients have pointers to radical radiation and can't be treated surgically.
  • ECOG PS of 0-2;
  • Women of childbearing age had negative pregnancy tests and were willing to accept drugs or intrauterine contraception, while men of childbearing age were willing to accept contraception voluntarily.
  • Adequate hematologic function:
  • Peripheral blood neutrophil count \> 2000 cells / uL, Platelet count \> 100\*109 / L; Hemoglobin \>9.0g/dL;
  • Blood total bilirubin \< 2 times normal upper limit, blood AST and ALT ≤
  • 5 times normal upper line;

Exclusion Criteria

  • With severe or uncontrolled systemic diseases;
  • With a history of asthma, systemic immune diseases, such as the need for long-term hormone treatment in patients;
  • The lung function decreased obviously;
  • Those receiving targeted therapy or biological therapy at the same time;
  • Allergic to beclomethasone propionate;
  • Pregnant or lactating women;
  • Accompanied by uncontrolled diabetes, need to take oral hormone treatment of sarcoidosis and vasculitis, lupus erythematosus and other immune diseases;
  • In recent 5 years has suffered from other tumors: cervical cancer, basal cell carcinoma of the skin, and so on;
  • The estimated survival time was less than 3 months.

Arms & Interventions

Prevention group

Participants inhaled beclomethasone propionate aerosol daily during chest radical radiotherapy (total dose 60GY).

Intervention: Beclomethasone propionate

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Incidence of radiation pneumonia between two groups of patients

Time Frame: Chest CT assessment every 6 weeks since thoracic irradiation, up to 36 weeks.

To evaluate the incidence of radiation pneumonia in 36weeks since thoracic irradiation between two groups of patients

Secondary Outcomes

  • Objective Response Rate between two groups of patients(tumor assessment every 6 weeks since thoracic irradiation , up to 36 weeks.)
  • Side effects between two groups of patients(36 weeks .)

Study Sites (1)

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