Nausea
Conditions
Keywords
nausea and vomiting, recurrent breast cancer, stage I breast cancer, stage II breast cancer, stage IIIA breast cancer, stage IIIB breast cancer, stage IIIC breast cancer, stage IV breast cancer, inflammatory breast cancer, male breast cancer
Brief summary
RATIONALE: Antiemetic drugs, such as granisetron, dexamethasone, prochlorperazine, aprepitant, and palonosetron, may help lessen or prevent nausea. It is not yet known which combination of antiemetic drugs is more effective in preventing nausea caused by chemotherapy. PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is comparing different combinations of granisetron, dexamethasone, prochlorperazine, aprepitant, and palonosetron to see how well they work in preventing nausea in patients undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer.
Detailed description
OBJECTIVES: Primary * Compare the efficacy of palonosetron hydrochloride and dexamethasone followed by prochlorperazine with vs without dexamethasone in preventing delayed nausea in women with chemotherapy-naive breast cancer. (Arms I and IV) * Determine if palonosetron hydrochloride is more effective than granisetron hydrochloride in controlling treatment-related delayed nausea in these patients. (Arms I and II) * Determine if the currently recommended antiemetic guideline of aprepitant combined with palonosetron hydrochloride and dexamethasone is the most effective antiemetic regimen for controlling treatment-related delayed nausea in these patients. (Arms III and IV) Secondary * Determine if the addition of dexamethasone to prochlorperazine is more effective than the same regimen without dexamethasone for reducing interference with functioning caused by chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting in these patients. (Arms I and IV) * Determine if palonosetron hydrochloride is more effective than granisetron hydrochloride for reducing interference with functioning caused by chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting in these patients. (Arms I and II) * Determine if the currently recommended antiemetic guideline of aprepitant combined with palonosetron hydrochloride and dexamethasone is the most effective antiemetic regimen for reducing interference with functioning due to chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting in these patients. (Arms III and IV) OUTLINE: This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter study. Patients are stratified according to CCOP center and gender. Patients are randomized to 1 of 4 treatment arms. Patients receive study treatment approximately 30 minutes before their scheduled first chemotherapy treatment. * Arm I: Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and another oral placebo once daily on days 2 and 3. * Arm II: Patients receive granisetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and another oral placebo once daily on days 2 and 3. * Arm III: Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV and dexamethasone IV once on day 1, oral aprepitant once daily on days 1-3, and oral dexamethasone once daily and oral placebo twice daily on days 2 and 3. * Arm IV: Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and oral dexamethasone once daily on days 2 and 3. Quality of life is assessed at baseline and on day 4. Nausea and vomiting, fatigue, sleep quality, exercise, and the need for rescue medication (metoclopramide) are assessed on days 1-4. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 890 patients will be accrued for this study.
Interventions
Given orally or IV
Given orally or IV
Given orally or IV
Given orally or IV
Given orally or IV
Given orally
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Have a diagnosis of cancer and be chemotherapy naive. * Must be scheduled to receive a chemotherapy treatment containing doxorubicin hydrochloride, epirubicin hydrochloride, cisplatin, carboplatin, or oxaliplatin (any dose or schedule) without concurrent radiotherapy or interferon treatment * Chemotherapy may be for adjuvant, neoadjuvant, curative or palliative intent. * Dose-dense regimens (e.g. chemotherapy with doxorubicin or epirubicin given every two weeks)are allowed. * For the purposes of this study, Day 1 of chemotherapy will be defined as the day of administration of cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin, doxorubicin or epirubicin. * Regimens with multiple-day doses of doxorubicin, epirubicin, cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin, dacarbazine, hexamethylmelamine, nitrosoureas, or streptozocin are not allowed. Chemotherapy agents, other than those listed above, may be given orally, intravenously, or by continuous infusion on one or multiple days. * Able to understand English
Exclusion criteria
* No symptomatic brain metastases * No concurrent or impending bowel obstruction * Regimens containing liposomal doxorubicin or cisplatin are not allowed. * No concurrent pimozide, terfenadine, astemizole, or cisapride * No concurrent doxorubicin hydrochloride liposome or cisplatin * No concurrent multiple-day doses of dacarbazine, altretamine, nitrosoureas, streptozocin, cisplatin, carboplatin, or oxaliplatin
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea | average of day 1 afternoon, evening and night, and all of days 2 and 3 | 1=not at all nauseated to 7=extremely nauseated, therefore higher values are worse |
Countries
United States
Participant flow
Recruitment details
Patients from 15 private-practice oncology groups in the USA affiliated with the University of Rochester Cancer Center Community Clinical Oncology Program (URCC CCOP)were enrolled by research personnel from May 2007 to September 2010.
Participants by arm
| Arm | Count |
|---|---|
| Arm II Patients receive granisetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and another oral placebo once daily on days 2 and 3.
placebo : Given orally
prochlorperazine : Given orally or IV
granisetron hydrochloride : Given orally or IV
dexamethasone : Given orally or IV | 254 |
| Arm III Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV and dexamethasone IV once on day 1, oral aprepitant once daily on days 1-3, and oral dexamethasone once daily and oral placebo twice daily on days 2 and 3.
placebo : Given orally
aprepitant : Given orally or IV
palonosetron hydrochloride : Given orally or IV
dexamethasone : Given orally or IV | 260 |
| Arm I Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and another oral placebo once daily on days 2 and 3.
placebo : Given orally
prochlorperazine : Given orally or IV
palonosetron hydrochloride : Given orally or IV
dexamethasone : Given orally or IV | 254 |
| Arm IV Patients receive palonosetron hydrochloride IV, dexamethasone IV, and oral placebo once on day 1 and oral prochlorperazine 3 times daily and oral dexamethasone once daily on days 2 and 3.
placebo : Given orally
prochlorperazine : Given orally or IV
palonosetron hydrochloride : Given orally or IV
dexamethasone : Given orally or IV | 253 |
| Total | 1,021 |
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Arm III | Arm II | Arm I | Arm IV | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Continuous | 58.6 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.4 | 57.2 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 12.7 | 57.1 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 12.4 | 58.2 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.4 | 57.8 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 12 |
| Previous Radiotherapy | 12 participants | 6 participants | 12 participants | 9 participants | 39 participants |
| Previous Surgery | 194 participants | 193 participants | 196 participants | 198 participants | 781 participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) American Indian or Alaska Native | 2 Participants | 2 Participants | 3 Participants | 2 Participants | 9 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) Asian | 4 Participants | 2 Participants | 0 Participants | 2 Participants | 8 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) Black or African American | 28 Participants | 18 Participants | 20 Participants | 19 Participants | 85 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) More than one race | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 1 Participants | 1 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) Unknown or Not Reported | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Race (NIH/OMB) White | 226 Participants | 232 Participants | 231 Participants | 229 Participants | 918 Participants |
| Region of Enrollment United States | 260 participants | 254 participants | 254 participants | 253 participants | 1021 participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Female | 201 Participants | 208 Participants | 193 Participants | 208 Participants | 810 Participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Male | 59 Participants | 46 Participants | 61 Participants | 45 Participants | 211 Participants |
Adverse events
| Event type | EG000 affected / at risk | EG001 affected / at risk | EG002 affected / at risk | EG003 affected / at risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| deaths Total, all-cause mortality | — / — | — / — | — / — | — / — |
| other Total, other adverse events | 1 / — | 1 / — | 0 / — | 1 / — |
| serious Total, serious adverse events | 6 / — | 17 / — | 16 / — | 11 / — |
Outcome results
Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea
1=not at all nauseated to 7=extremely nauseated, therefore higher values are worse
Time frame: average of day 1 afternoon, evening and night, and all of days 2 and 3
| Arm | Measure | Value (MEAN) | Dispersion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arm II | Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea | 1.88 units on a scale | Standard Deviation 1.27 |
| Arm III | Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea | 1.65 units on a scale | Standard Deviation 1.15 |
| Arm I | Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea | 1.87 units on a scale | Standard Deviation 1.2 |
| Arm IV | Home Record: Severity of Delayed Nausea | 1.68 units on a scale | Standard Deviation 1.15 |