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Clinical Trial Results

Summaries of Newsworthy Clinical Trial Results

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    Posted: 06/27/2006
Related Pages
Search for Clinical Trials 1
NCI's PDQ® Cancer Clinical Trials Registry.

Uterine Sarcoma Home Page 2
NCI's gateway for information about uterine sarcoma.

Highlights from ASCO 2006 3
A collection of links to material summarizing some of the important clinical trial results announced at the 2006 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
Chemotherapy Superior to Whole-Abdominal Radiation Therapy for Uterine Sarcoma

Key Words

Uterine sarcoma, whole-abdominal radiation therapy, cisplatin; ifosfamide. (Definitions of many terms related to cancer can be found in the Cancer.gov Dictionary 4.)

Summary

Chemotherapy with cisplatin and ifosfamide was more effective than whole-abdominal radiation therapy at extending survival in patients with uterine sarcoma. However, better therapies are still needed for patients with this rare form of uterine cancer.

Source

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting, Atlanta, June 3, 2006 (see the meeting abstract 5).

Background

Surgery is the most common treatment for uterine sarcoma, a rare cancer of the muscles or tissues that support the uterus. The disease accounts for just 3 to 5 percent of uterine cancers. No large-scale randomized clinical trial had explored what might be the best treatment to do after surgery (called adjuvant therapy) – chemotherapy or radiation.

The Study

This international phase III randomized clinical trial compared whole-abdominal radiation therapy (WAI) versus chemotherapy as adjuvant treatment for uterine carcinosarcoma. Women with any stage of cancer who had no more than 1 centimeter of tumor tissue left after surgery, and whose cancer had not spread outside the abdomen, were eligible to enroll in the trial.

Between 1993 and 2005, investigators enrolled 206 eligible women. No more than eight weeks after surgery, patients were randomly assigned to receive either WAI (105 women) or chemotherapy with cisplatin and ifosfamide plus the supportive drug mesna (102 women). Mesna protects the kidneys and bladder from chemotherapy drugs that could harm these organs. The investigators compared survival, location of first cancer recurrence, and treatment-related side effects between the WAI and chemotherapy groups. Patients were followed for an average of five years after treatment.

The trial was conducted by the Gynecologic Oncology Group, an NCI-funded cooperative cancer research group. The lead author of the study is Aaron H. Wolfson, M.D., of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

Results

Without accounting for factors such as age and cancer stage, the death rate was 31 percent lower in the chemotherapy group - a statistically significant difference.

After adjusting for cancer stage, type of cells found in the tumors, and patients’ age, there was no statistically significant difference in the risk of cancer recurrence between the two groups, though there was a trend in favor of chemotherapy.

Patients older than 65 were more likely than younger patients to have their cancer recur after either treatment. Women receiving chemotherapy were more likely to have their cancer recur in the vagina than women receiving WAI, and women receiving WAI were more likely to have their cancer recur in the abdomen than women receiving chemotherapy.

More patients receiving chemotherapy experienced high-grade anemia (11 women versus 1 woman receiving WAI) and high-grade side effects in the nervous system (9 women versus none of the women receiving WAI). One patient in the chemotherapy group died during treatment; her death was attributed in part to chemotherapy-induced kidney failure. However, two patients in the WAI group died from radiation-therapy induced hepatitis (inflammation of the liver). In addition, more patients receiving WAI (six women versus none of the women receiving chemotherapy) had chronic gastrointestinal side effects after treatment.

Limitations

During the discussion after the ASCO presentation, Thomas Herzog, M.D., director of the Division of Gynecologic Oncology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York, pointed out that because the study enrolled patients over a 12-year period, the chemotherapy and radiation therapy techniques chosen at the beginning “may be challenged as somewhat obsolete.” In addition, the investigators were not able to enroll as many patients as planned into the trial due to the rarity of the cancer.

Comments

“We feel that adjuvant chemotherapy is certainly more effective…than radiotherapy” in reducing recurrence and prolonging survival for patients after surgery for uterine sarcoma, stated Wolfson, the study’s lead author. He suggested that future trials test vaginal brachytherapy (a form of local radiation therapy) in addition to chemotherapy, to reduce the risk of vaginal recurrence of the cancer.

Ted Trimble, M.D., M.P.H., a gynecologic cancer specialist with the National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, agreed with Wolfson’s assessment, stating that “this trial does suggest that women with advanced carcinosarcoma of the uterus should be treated with primary surgery, vaginal brachytherapy, and systemic chemotherapy.”

New therapies are still urgently needed, said Herzog. “Overall poor survival calls for further innovation in treatment of carcinosarcoma, perhaps by adding brachytherapy to chemotherapy, or by adding additional chemotherapy cycles or changing the agents that are utilized to more contemporary chemotherapeutic agents.”



Glossary Terms

adjuvant therapy (A-joo-vant THAYR-uh-pee)
Additional cancer treatment given after the primary treatment to lower the risk that the cancer will come back. Adjuvant therapy may include chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy, or biological therapy.
cisplatin (sis-PLA-tin)
A drug used to treat many types of cancer. Cisplatin contains the metal platinum. It kills cancer cells by damaging their DNA and stopping them from dividing. Cisplatin is a type of alkylating agent. Also called Platinol.
ifosfamide (i-FOS-fuh-mide)
A drug that is used together with other drugs to treat germ cell testicular cancer that did not respond to previous treatment with other drugs. It is also being studied in the treatment of other types of cancer. Ifosfamide attaches to DNA in cells and may kill cancer cells. It is a type of alkylating agent and a type of antimetabolite. Also called Ifex.
phase III trial
A study to compare the results of people taking a new treatment with the results of people taking the standard treatment (for example, which group has better survival rates or fewer side effects). In most cases, studies move into phase III only after a treatment seems to work in phases I and II. Phase III trials may include hundreds of people.
randomized clinical trial
A study in which the participants are assigned by chance to separate groups that compare different treatments; neither the researchers nor the participants can choose which group. Using chance to assign people to groups means that the groups will be similar and that the treatments they receive can be compared objectively. At the time of the trial, it is not known which treatment is best. It is the patient's choice to be in a randomized trial.
statistically significant
Describes a mathematical measure of difference between groups. The difference is said to be statistically significant if it is greater than what might be expected to happen by chance alone. Also called significant.


Table of Links

1http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/search
2http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/uterinesarcoma
3http://www.cancer.gov/asco2006/highlights
4http://www.cancer.gov/dictionary
5http://www.asco.org/portal/site/ASCO/menuitem.34d60f5624ba07fd506fe310ee37a01d/
?vgnextoid=76f8201eb61a7010VgnVCM100000ed730ad1RCRD&vmview=abst_detail_view&con
fID=40&abstractID=30221