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Radiation Therapy Using Helical Tomotherapy IMRT for Head and Neck Cancer

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cancer
Interventions
Procedure: Radiotherapy
Registration Number
NCT00426504
Lead Sponsor
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Brief Summary

Historically, patients with stage III and IV head and neck cancer have been treated with surgery and/or radiation therapy. Based on the results of recent clinical trials, in patients not able to undergo surgery, chemotherapy with radiation therapy has been adopted as the current standard of care. The chemo-radiation approach, however, entails a significant increase in treatment-related toxicity, limiting the extent to which this treatment can be offered to patients. In this trial, the ability of a new form of radiation therapy delivery called IMRT will be evaluated for its ability to reduce the amount of radiation-induced toxicity.

Detailed Description

The mechanisms of action to explain the radiation-induced toxic effects resulting from the more aggressive radiation therapy treatments of head and neck cancer include the additive and synergistic increase in mucositis from the combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The severe toxicity associated with more aggressive radiation therapy treatments for locoregional head and neck cancer limits the extent to which these treatments can be offered since many patients present with nutritional deficiencies and consequent general debility. Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) is a technology has the potential for exquisite dose painting and structuring in such a manner that it can permit exclusion of normal tissues and sensitive structures from the high dose radiation volume without compromising primary tumor or nodal target coverage. In this phase I/II feasibility trial, radical radiotherapy will be delivered using Helical Tomotherapy Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (HT-IMRT) to a dose of 66-70 Gy to involved areas and to at least 50 Gy to un-involved sites, treated prophylactically. It is hypothesized that the pattern of failure and toxicity profiles of patients treated with helical tomotherapy will demonstrate the greater efficacy of helical tomotherapy, as compared with conventional radiotherapy, in the treatment of cancers of the head and neck.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
89
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Stage II, III or IV non-metastatic histologically confirmed carcinoma of the head and neck region (Oral cavity, pharynx or larynx).
  2. Treatment with radical radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy
  3. Patients in whom definitive radiotherapy with or without planned neck dissection is the selected curative treatment
  4. ECOG performance status of 0, 1 or 2
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Previous radiotherapy to head and neck mucosa
  2. Patients with disabling co-morbid conditions, which do not permit effective immobilization
  3. Patients with severe trismus, which disallow effective assessment
  4. Patients in whom it is deemed necessary to commence enteric nutrition prior to the start of treatment.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
radiotherapyRadiotherapyHelical Tomotherapy Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (HT-IMRT) with the intend of delivering radical radiotherapy to a dose of 66-70 Gy to involved areas and at least 50 Gy to un-involved sites to be treated prophylactically.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1) To determine the toxicity profile of patients with head and neck cancer treated with helical tomotherapy-IMRTweekly

MEASURING MUCOSITIS

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1) To compare the dose distributions generated by HT-IMRT with those generated using three-dimensional conformal radiation, 2) To determine the pattern of relapse in the primary site and neck within the first 2 years following treatment,1-once 2- 6 monthly

comparing dose distribution

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Ottawa Hospital Regional Cancer Centre

🇨🇦

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

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