Hypofractionated Radiotherapy With Hyperthermia in Unresectable or Marginally Resectable Soft Tissue Sarcomas
- Conditions
- FibrosarcomaSarcomaLiposarcoma, DedifferentiatedLeiomyosarcomaMalignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath TumorsSynovial SarcomaUndifferentiated Pleomorphic SarcomaAlveolar Soft Part SarcomaClear Cell SarcomaMyxoid Liposarcoma
- Interventions
- Radiation: Hypofractionated radiotherapyOther: Hyperthermia
- Registration Number
- NCT03989596
- Brief Summary
After a screening, which consists of biopsy, physical examination, initial diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI-MRI) or body computed tomography (CT) scan, blood tests and case analysis on Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) meeting, a patient will receive the hypofractionated radiotherapy 10x 3.25 Gy with regional hyperthermia (twice a week) within two weeks. The response analysis in CT or DWI-MRI and toxicity assessment will be performed after at least 6 weeks. At the second MDT meeting, a final decision about resectability of the tumor will be made. In case of resectability or consent for amputation, if required, a patient will be referred to surgery. In case of unresectability or amputation refusal, the patient will receive the second part of the treatment which consists of 4x 4 Gy with hyperthermia (twice a week).
- Detailed Description
There is a lack of standard treatment of unresectable and marginally resectable sarcomas. Results of commonly used approaches are unsatisfactory, especially in patients who are not candidates for neoadjuvant chemotherapy due to poor performance status, comorbidities, radioresistant pathology or disease progression on the commonly used chemotherapy regimens. The addition of regional hyperthermia to irradiation and in the prolonged gap between the end of hypofractionated 10x 3.25 Gy radiotherapy and surgery may allow obtaining the long-term local control with the maintenance of a good treatment tolerance.
Hypofractionation represents a variation of radiotherapy fractionation in which the total dose is divided into fewer fractions with an increased fraction dose. Such treatment may lead to additional biological effects when compared to conventionally fractionated radiotherapy (eg. vascular damage, increased immunogenicity, and antigenicity). The main advantages of hypofractionation are those related to the decreased overall treatment time which is more convenient for both patients and physicians, increased compliance and makes the treatment more cost-effective. Intriguing, such an approach may provide an additional benefit when treating non-radiosensitive tumors with a low alpha/beta ratio (eg. sarcomas).
Hyperthermia is a method of increasing the temperature in the tumor to damage cancer cells with minimum injury to the normal cells. It should be combined with another treatment modality (radio- or chemotherapy) rather than used alone. Its efficacy was proven in clinical trials. The treatment tolerance is usually very good.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- Able to provide informed consent; age ≥18 years old
- Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0 - 2
- Histologic diagnosis of locally advanced soft tissue sarcoma
- Marginally resectable or unresectable tumor (assessed at Multidisciplinary Tumor Board)
- Radioresistant sarcoma subtype (low-grade tumor or radioresistant histology) or contradictions to chemotherapy (assessed at Multidisciplinary Tumor Board) or progression after neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- Radiation-induced sarcoma or previous radiation to the affected volume
- Histologic diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma (except pleomorphic subtype), osteogenic sarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma/PNET, aggressive fibromatosis
- Contraindications to radiotherapy or hyperthermia
- Distant metastases
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Radiotherapy with hyperthermia Hypofractionated radiotherapy 10x 3.25 Gy + hyperthermia + surgery or radiotherapy boost (4x 4 Gy + hyperthermia) Radiotherapy with hyperthermia Hyperthermia 10x 3.25 Gy + hyperthermia + surgery or radiotherapy boost (4x 4 Gy + hyperthermia)
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Feasibility of the treatment schedule Up to 3 months The exact 95% confidence interval for an estimated feasibility proportion of 80% (23 of 30 patients) does not include (60-80%) a value of 50%. Thus, for a sample size of 30 patients, the feasibility of 80% is above chance level performance (50%).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method One-year progression-free survival 12 months after treatment completion One-year sarcoma-specific survival 12 months after treatment completion One-year local control rate 12 months after treatment completion Rate of late toxicities Two years after treatment completion Rate of late toxicities of a planned schedule of therapy according to CTCAE 5.0
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Maria Sklodowska-Curie Institute - Oncology Center
🇵🇱Warsaw, Mazovian, Poland