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Phase III Study of Surgery Followed By Chemotherapy in Patients With Nonmetastatic Soft Tissue Sarcoma With Randomization to 3-Drug Versus 6-Drug Continuation Therapy in Patients With High-Risk Chemosensitive Tumors
Alternate Title Basic Trial Information Objectives Entry Criteria Expected Enrollment Outline Related Publications Trial Contact Information Registry Information
Alternate Title
Surgery Followed by Chemotherapy in Treating Young Patients With Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Basic Trial Information
| Phase | Type | Status | Age | Protocol IDs |
|---|
| Phase III | Treatment | Closed | Under 18 | SIOP-MMT-95 EU-96035, NCT00002898 |
Objectives - Assess whether good survival rates can be maintained for patients with stage I (pathologic T1) soft tissue sarcomas (STS) treated with limited chemotherapy after complete surgical resection, and whether disease-free survival can be improved by improving the precision of pretreatment staging and the assessment of the completeness of the resection.
- Compare the survival of patients with high-risk nonmetastatic STS treated with alternating regimens of carboplatin, epirubicin, and vincristine (CEV) and ifosfamide, vincristine, and etoposide (IVE) vs continuation of ifosfamide, vincristine, and dactinomycin (IVA) after initial therapy with IVA.
- Assess whether the improved outcome seen for patients with stage III (node positive) STS in an earlier protocol (SIOP-MMT-89) can be maintained with 3 courses of alternating CEV/IVE without altering local therapy.
- Compare outcome of patients with nonmetastatic STS to those with stage IV STS who are registered on this protocol but referred to treatment on the European Intergroup Stage IV Study.
- Assess survival and the risk of late sequelae in patients with non-rhabdomyosarcoma malignant mesenchymal tumors treated on this protocol.
- Evaluate the role of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, new prognostic factors (e.g., ploidy, histologic grading), and recommendations for the management of fibrosarcoma in infants and of fibromatoses.
- Assess ifosfamide nephrotoxicity based on total dose administered and the long-term toxicity based on the potential predictive value of early evidence of nephrotoxicity.
Entry Criteria Disease Characteristics:
- Histologically confirmed primary soft tissue sarcoma:
- Rhabdomyosarcoma
- Non-rhabdomyosarcoma
- Soft tissue primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET)
- Extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma
Prior/Concurrent Therapy:
Biologic: Chemotherapy: Endocrine: Radiotherapy: Surgery: - Prior primary surgery allowed
Other: Patient Characteristics:
Age: Performance status: Life expectancy: Hematopoietic: Hepatic: Renal: Expected Enrollment 400A total of 400 patients with high-risk nonmetastatic disease will be accrued
for this study within approximately 4 years. Outline This is a randomized study for patients with high-risk, nonmetastatic
sarcoma, except those with the following characteristics: age less than 6
months, stage I/II non-alveolar orbital tumor, stage III disease, or age less
than 3 years with parameningeal disease. Patients are stratified according to
disease type (rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) vs non-RMS disease), parameningeal site
of disease, and participating center. Patients with RMS are further
randomized by alveolar histology. Randomization occurs after the first course
of chemotherapy. All patients, regardless of disease stage, are registered to this study
and outcome is followed, although patients with metastatic RMS or non-RMS
malignant mesenchymal tumors are referred for treatment on the SIOP-MMT-98
study. Patients diagnosed more than 8 weeks prior to entry or who are
unavailable for follow-up are not treated on study. Doses are modified for
patients under 1 year of age or under 10 kg of body weight. All other
patients are assigned therapy based on risk group. After surgery, patients with complete resection and with proven or
possible chemosensitive histologies proceed to chemotherapy on the low-risk
regimen. Patients with questionable completeness of resection proceed to
chemotherapy for standard-risk or high-risk tumors, as appropriate.
Regardless of resection results, patients who underwent scrotal surgery for
paratesticular tumors proceed to chemotherapy for standard-risk tumors.
Alveolar RMS is considered high risk. LOW-RISK TUMORS (T1 N0 M0): Strategy 951 - Tumors must be resectable without extensive, mutilating surgery, and
resection margins must be microscopically negative at all sites. Patients
with positive margins may undergo re-excision.
- Vincristine is administered weekly for 4 weeks with dactinomycin given
on the same day as the first and fourth doses of vincristine. The course is
repeated once after a 3-week rest.
STANDARD-RISK TUMORS (T1-2 N0 M0): Strategy 952 - After resection as above, patients with incompletely resected T1 tumors,
completely resected T1 tumors that extended beyond the tissue or organ of
origin, or completely or incompletely resected T2 tumors at favorable sites
(vagina, uterus, or paratesticular region) receive chemotherapy on this
regimen.
- Ifosfamide, vincristine, and dactinomycin (IVA) is started within 8
weeks of surgery and administered every 3 weeks for 3 courses; during this
course only, vincristine is administered weekly throughout the 6 weeks.
Response is assessed at week 8.
- Patients with at least a 50% response at week 8 receive 3 more courses
of IVA and are reassessed at week 17; those with a complete response (CR)
discontinue treatment, while those with less than a CR begin local therapy
(described below) on week 18 concurrently with 3 more courses of IVA (unless
no further response was seen after week 8).
- Patients with less than a 50% response at week 8 receive carboplatin,
epirubicin, and vincristine (CEV) on weeks 9, 15, and 21 and ifosfamide,
vincristine, and etoposide (IVE) on weeks 12, 18, and 24. Patients with less
than a CR at week 17 receive concurrent local therapy beginning at week
18.
HIGH-RISK TUMORS: Strategy 953 - Patients with high-risk tumors after surgery are randomized to IVA as in
strategy 952 (Arm I) or to 3 weeks of IVA (1 course) as in Strategy 952
followed by CEV and IVE as in Strategy 952 (Arm II). Response is assessed at
week 8. Patients with parameningeal disease who are at least 3 years of age
proceed to radiotherapy at week 9, regardless of response.
- Patients on Arm I with at least a 50% response at week 8 receive 3 more
courses of IVA and are reassessed at week 17; those who continue to respond
between weeks 8 and 17 receive 3 additional courses of IVA. Patients with no
further response receive 4 alternating courses of CEV and IVE. All patients
with less than a CR at week 17 begin local therapy on week 18 concurrently
with the additional chemotherapy. Patients on Arm I with less than a 50%
response at week 8 receive alternating CEV and IVE as in Strategy 952.
Patients with less than a CR at week 17 begin concurrent local therapy at week
18.
- Patients on Arm II who have at least a 50% response at week 8 continue
treatment with 2 courses of sequential IVA, CEV, and IVE. Local therapy is
concurrently administered, beginning on week 18, to patients who have not
achieved a CR by week 17. Patients on Arm II who have less than a 50%
response at week 8 proceed immediately to local therapy with additional
chemotherapy at the investigator's discretion. Patients with less than a CR
after local therapy are considered for treatment on a phase II protocol.
LOCAL THERAPY - Local therapy consists of conservative resection of residual disease
(unless more debilitating surgery is appropriate). Patients with residual
disease after surgery undergo external-beam radiotherapy 5 days per week for
6-7 weeks or brachytherapy; hyperfractionation is specifically excluded. For
patients receiving radiotherapy, the dactinomycin dose in the IVA regimen is
omitted from the middle course of chemotherapy and possibly the last course of
chemotherapy during concurrent administration. Patients receiving alternating
CEV and IVE have the courses reversed during concurrent radiotherapy, with
possible omission of epirubicin for the third course.
- Radical surgery is considered for any patient who has residual disease
at week 27.
TREATMENT FOR RELAPSE - Patients treated with Strategy 951 proceed to therapy with at least 6
alternating courses of IVE and CEV, with local therapy initiated after the
second course. Other patients receive at least 6 alternating courses of CEV
and vincristine, carboplatin, and etoposide (modified Vincaepi), with local
therapy initiated after the second course. Patients who have already received
either regimen may be re-treated with carboplatin and etoposide and
vincristine and cyclophosphamide if relapse occurs more than 6 months after
treatment, while those who relapse in less than 6 months are considered for
phase II chemotherapy trials. Patients with metastatic relapse are evaluated
for bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation.
Patients are followed every 2 months until 2 years after diagnosis,
every 3 months for 1 year, every 6 months for 2 years, and then annually until
10 years after diagnosis. Related PublicationsDefachelles AS, Rey A, Oberlin O, et al.: Treatment of nonmetastatic cranial parameningeal rhabdomyosarcoma in children younger than 3 years old: results from international society of pediatric oncology studies MMT 89 and 95. J Clin Oncol 27 (8): 1310-5, 2009.[PUBMED Abstract]
Trial Contact Information
Trial Lead Organizations Societe Internationale d'Oncologie Pediatrique  |  |  | | M. C. G. Stevens, MD, Protocol chair |  | |  |
| Registry Information |  | | Official Title | | MMT 95 Study For Rhabdomyosarcoma and Other Malignant Soft Tissue Tumors of Childhood |  | | Trial Start Date | | 1995-01-01 |  | | Registered in ClinicalTrials.gov | | NCT00002898 |  | | Date Submitted to PDQ | | 1995-01-01 |  | | Information Last Verified | | 1999-05-06 |
Note: The purpose of most clinical trials listed in this database is to test new cancer treatments, or new methods of diagnosing, screening, or preventing cancer. Because all potentially harmful side effects are not known before a trial is conducted, dose and schedule modifications may be required for participants if they develop side effects from the treatment or test. The therapy or test described in this clinical trial is intended for use by clinical oncologists in carefully structured settings, and may not prove to be more effective than standard treatment. A responsible investigator associated with this clinical trial should be consulted before using this protocol. Back to Top |
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