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Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) in Liver Metastasis (COLD 3)

Phase II Trial of Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy for Unresectable Liver Metastases From Colorectal Carcinoma

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00914615
Enrollment
35
Registered
2009-06-05
Start date
2007-08-31
Completion date
2020-08-07
Last updated
2021-10-06

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Liver Metastasis

Keywords

Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy, Liver Metastasis from colorectal cancer, Patients with Liver Metastasis

Brief summary

This study is designed to see whether stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) can reduce tumour size, slow progression of the disease, prolong life and improve quality of life. SBRT is concentrated focused radiation therapy delivered very precisely to the liver tumour. Presently, the treatment for unresectable liver metastases from colorectal cancer is most often chemotherapy or novel targeted therapy. These treatments may improve survival, but not control the metastases permanently; so new treatments are needed to control metastases. It is hoped that knowledge obtained from this study will improve our ability to treat patients with liver tumours that cannot be treated with surgery and other methods, and that SBRT may prove to be a treatment that can lead to long-term and permanent control of liver tumours for some patients.

Detailed description

From July 2003 to May 2007, over 50 patients with liver metastases participated in two studies at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) designed to determine the safety of treating liver metastases with SBRT. These studies have shown that SBRT can be delivered safely to the majority of patients with liver metastases. The treated tumour was controlled (shrank or remained the same size) in 74% of patients at one year following treatment. The median survival of patients was 16 months (i.e.half of patients survived longer and half shorter than 16 months). This survival rate is better than that expected in patients whose tumours grew bigger even though they were treated with chemotherapy. Supportive care only (no treatment other than care to make you feel better) in these patients is associated with a median survival rate of 6-12 months. We expect that the benefits of SBRT in this study will be similar to those observed in our initial studies.

Interventions

Radiation therapy will be delivered on six occasions, over two weeks. Each treatment will take approximately 30 minutes to deliver (up to an hour including all imaging and set-up procedures). You may be asked to swallow 250 cc of oral contrast before each radiation therapy treatment. Pepto Bismol (a liquid that coats the stomach and is used to treat heartburn) and/or water may be combined with the contrast to improve the quality of the stomach's image.

Sponsors

University Health Network, Toronto
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Eligible patients must have liver metastases from colorectal cancer 1) with histologic confirmation of metastases, 2) histologic confirmation of primary cancer and multiple new enhancing lesions in the liver consistent with metastases, or 3) histologic confirmation of primary cancer and a growing enhancing lesion in the liver Phase II SBRT Mets 13 consistent with a metastases * Either 1) the tumour must be unresectable, based on the opinion of an experienced surgeon specializing in hepatic resection, or 2) the patient must be medically inoperable, or 3) extra-hepatic metastases must be present (making hepatic surgery an inappropriate treatment option). * Karnofsky performance status (KPS) \> 60 (Appendix II) * Age: 18 years or older. Both male & female patients of all races can be included in this study. Female patients within reproductive years may not be, nor become, pregnant during participation in this study * Patients must have recovered from the effects of previous therapy * Maximal tumor size of 15 cm * Adequate organ function as assessed as follows: * Hemoglobin \> 90 g/L * Absolute neutrophil count \> 1.0 bil/L * Platelets \> 60bil/L * Bilirubin \< 4.0 times upper range of normal * INR \< 1.5 or correctable with vitamin K (unless patients are on anticoagulation doses that have been stable for the past 2 months and they haven't had a bleed in the past 2 months) * AST or ALT \< 6.0 times upper limit of normal range * Child's A 5-6 liver score * Previous liver resection or ablative therapy is permitted * Life expectancy \> 3 months * The volume of uninvolved must be at least 700 cc * Up to five discrete liver tumors * Patients must have signed a study-specific informed consent form. If the patient's mental status precludes this, written informed consent may be given by the patient's legal representative.

Exclusion criteria

* Patients with active hepatitis or encephalopathy related to liver failure * Prior radiation therapy to the right upper abdomen, precluding reirradiation of the liver. That is, any previous radiation therapy in which a mean dose to the liver of 15 Gy in conventional fractionation was delivered, or previous doses to critical normal structures that would make re-irradiation unsafe. The PI should be called if there is any question of safety of re-irradiation. * Prior uncontrolled, life threatening malignancy within the six months. * Pregnancy is not permitted, and in women of child bearing age, a pregnancy test and acceptable methods of contraception are warranted. * Previous variceal bleed within the past 2 months

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Determine one year local progression free rate, defined as lack of progression within the irradiated volume, using RECIST criteria.5 years

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Overall progression free survival5 years
Overall survival5 years
Quality of life5 years
CTC3.0 toxicity5 years
Cytokine response to radiation and association with complications5 years

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026