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A Phase II Trial of Limited Surgery and Proton Therapy for Craniopharyngioma or Observation After Radical Resection

A Phase II Trial of Limited Surgery and Proton Therapy for Craniopharyngioma and Observation for Craniopharyngioma After Radical Resection

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01419067
Enrollment
112
Registered
2011-08-17
Start date
2011-08-22
Completion date
2026-07-31
Last updated
2025-10-17

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

Conditions

Craniopharyngioma

Keywords

Proton Therapy, Radical resection

Brief summary

The goal of this study is to determine the feasibility and safety of treating patients with a brain tumor known as craniopharyngioma with limited surgery and a 5mm clinical target volume margin in combination with proton therapy. Proton therapy will be indicated for patients with diagnosed craniopharyngioma who are not treated with radical surgery (gross-total resection). Irradiated patients will undergo a series of evaluations designed to evaluate the effects of proton therapy. Similar evaluations will be performed on patients treated with radical surgery. Proton therapy will include 30 treatment fractions administered 5 days per week. Weekly imaging will be a requirement to monitor for cyst expansion and target volume deformation.

Detailed description

The primary objectives of this study : To estimate the progression-free and overall survival distributions for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated with limited surgery and proton therapy using a 5mm clinical target volume margin while monitoring for excessive central nervous system necrosis. The Secondary Objectives of this study: * To estimate the cumulative incidence of cystic intervention and the event-free survival distribution for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated with limited surgery and proton therapy using a 5mm clinical target volume margin; and compare the distributions of progression-free, event-free and overall survival with the distributions for the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital cohort of 93 patients on which the design of this trial is based. * To estimate the distributions of progression-free survival and overall survival for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated only with primary surgical resection and to compare these distributions with the distributions observed for patients treated with limited surgery and proton therapy.

Interventions

PROCEDURERadical Surgery or Limited Surgery

Patients will be selected for radical surgery based on the neurosurgeon's assessment that a Gross-Total Resection may be achieved with acceptable post-operative morbidity. The goal of surgical intervention in this study should be to facilitate tumor control, keeping surgical morbidity to a minimum. Common indications for surgical intervention directed at the tumor will include establishing a tissue diagnosis, tumor control by radical resection, relieving tumor mass effect to reduce symptoms and decreasing the target volume for proton therapy by planned volume reduction surgery. These indications can be achieved through radical or limited surgery.

DEVICEProton Therapy

Proton therapy will be started once a final treatment plan has been developed and approved. There is no time limit for the interval from enrollment to when proton therapy commences. The total prescribed dose will be 54CGE administered at 1.8CGE per fraction. The time course of administration will be one fraction per day, 5 days per week, for a period of 6 weeks. Radiation will be prescribed to the planning target volume which will include the tumor bed encompassed by an anatomically defined margin meant to include subclinical microscopic disease, and an additional geometric margin that is meant to account for the technical limitations associated with planning and administering daily fractionated treatment. Making radiation therapy safer through the use of proton therapy.

This is a contrast media that will be given intravenously to aid in tumor visualization.

This is a contrast media that will be given intravenously to aid in tumor visualization.

Sponsors

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
No minimum to 21 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Craniopharyngioma diagnosed by histology, cytology or neuroimaging. * Patients ages 0-21 years at the time of diagnosis.

Exclusion criteria

* Prior history of fractionated radiation therapy. * Prior treatment with intracystic P-32, intracystic bleomycin or radiosurgery. * Pregnant females are excluded. Radiation has teratogenic or abortifacient effects.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Estimate the progression-free and overall survival distributions for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated with limited surgery and proton therapy5 yearsReducing the clinical target volume margin to 5mm and using proton therapy, with the goal of reducing side effects from irradiation, will not increase the rate of tumor progression compared to photon therapy with a similar or larger clinical target volume margin.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Estimate the cumulative incidence of cystic intervention and the event-free survival distribution for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated with limited surgery and proton therapy5 yearsThis will be improved by models based on clinical and treatment factors and longitudinal measures of CNS effects.
Estimate the distributions of progression-free survival and overall survival for children and young adults with craniopharyngioma treated only with primary surgical resection5 yearsThis will be improved by models based on clinical and treatment factors and longitudinal measures of CNS effects

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 19, 2026