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Adaptive Radiation in Anal Cancer

Feasibility Study of Adaptive Radiotherapy for the Treatment of Locally-Advanced Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05838391
Enrollment
20
Registered
2023-05-01
Start date
2023-05-18
Completion date
2028-12-31
Last updated
2026-02-03

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

Conditions

Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Keywords

Anal cancer, Adaptive radiation, Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy

Brief summary

This is a 20 patient pilot study to examine the feasibility of dose-adapted radiation therapy for the treatment of locally advanced anal squamous cell cancer. The tumor and a patient's anatomy may change during radiation treatment and daily adaption of the radiation plan (i.e., a new daily plan based on the anatomy of the day) may help to maximize the dose to the tumor and minimize the radiation dose to the normal surrounding organs.

Detailed description

The standard treatment for Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)-positive locally advanced anal cancer (described as a tumor that is greater than 4 cm in size, or with positive lymph nodes) is 54 Gy of radiation treatment to the anal canal and primary tumor planning total volume (PTV), 50.4-54 Gy to positive nodal PTV and 45 Gy to elective lymph node PTV with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and mitomycin-C chemotherapy administered at the same time as radiation in 30 fraction (treatments) delivery. During the six week course of radiotherapy, there is often a notable decrease in volume of the tumor (both primary and regional nodes), as early as one week into treatment, detected on weekly on-board Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT), which is a scan done on the treatment machine while patients receive radiation to ensure that the tumor is being treated and normal tissue is not. However, CT simulation (a CT scan used to plan radiation treatment) and re-planning of the treatment to account for the tumor shrinkage are not routinely performed due to time, patient inconvenience and staffing resources. As such, daily adaptive radiation, which can generate a new CT-based plan using the anatomy of the day, may be a time efficient method to both plan and treat the patient.

Interventions

RADIATIONArtificial Intelligence Guided Daily Radiotherapy Treatment Planning and Delivery

Subjects will receive 54 Gy of radiation delivered 5 day a week for 6 weeks, 30 radiation treatments total. Intensity-Modulated photon radiation therapy will be delivered on a Varian Ethos linear accelerator. Daily image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) is required. All treatments will have artificial-intelligence (AI) daily adaptations of the radiation plan to optimize the radiation dose to the targeted area and minimize radiation dose to the normal surrounding organs such as the bowel.

As part of the subjects' treatment, 10 mg/meters squared of Mitomycin C will be administered intravenously (IV-into the vein) on Day 1 and Day 29.

DRUG5-Fluorouracil

As part of the subjects' treatment, 1g/meters squared/day for 4 days of 5-Fluorouracil will be administered by continuous infusion on Days 1-4 (for 96 hours) and Days 29-32 (for 96 hours). 5-Fluorouracil or capecitabine will be administered per the physician's discretion.

DRUGCapecitabine

As part of the subjects' treatment, 825 mg/meters squared per day, divided into 2 daily doses, will be taken on days of radiotherapy. Capecitabine or 5-FU will be administered per the physician's discretion.

Sponsors

Columbia University
Lead SponsorOTHER
Varian Medical Systems
CollaboratorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Histologically proven, invasive primary squamous, basaloid or cloacogenic carcinoma of the anal canal. * American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) 8th edition stage T2 \> 4 cm, T3-4 or N1. * Age ≥18 years. * Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status ≤2 (Karnofsky ≥60%). * Life expectancy of greater than 12 months. * Patients must have normal organ and marrow function as defined below: * leukocytes greater than or equal to 3,000/microliter * absolute neutrophil count greater than or equal to 1,500/microliter * platelets greater than or equal to 100,000/microliter * total bilirubin within normal institutional limits * Aspartate transaminase (AST)(SGOT)/Alanine transaminase (ALT)(SGPT) ≤ 2.5 × institutional upper limit of normal * creatinine within normal institutional limits OR creatinine clearance ≥60 mL/min/1.73 m2 for patients with creatinine levels above institutional normal. * Females of childbearing potential and males must agree to use adequate contraception (hormonal or barrier method of birth control; abstinence) prior to study entry, for the duration of study participation, and for 6 months after completion of study therapy. All pregnancies must be reported. * Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.

Exclusion criteria

* Prior or co-existing invasive malignancy (except non-melanomatous skin cancer) unless disease free ≥ 2 years. * Prior chemotherapy or radiation for anal cancer. * Patients who have undergone complete surgical resection. * Presence of recurrent/metastatic disease. * Prior allergic reaction to 5-Fluorouracil or mitomycin C. * Artificial organ prosthetics, pacemakers or other implantable devices. * Prior radiotherapy to the pelvis that would result in overlap of radiation therapy fields. * Uncontrolled inter-current illness including but not limited to known history of HIV with cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4) count less than 200 or symptomatic cardiac disease. * Women who are pregnant or lactating.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time to plan and deliver treatment fractions.Up to 6 weeksThis is defined by the time the first cone beam computed tomography to the end of treatment delivery for each treatment.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Acute Treatment ToxicityUp to 1 month post-treatmentToxicity of treatment will be analyzed using NCI-CTCAE v5.0.
Complete Clinical Response Rate6 months following the completion of chemoradiationComplete response to treatment (CR) is defined as absence of detectable cancer.

Countries

United States

Contacts

CONTACTChristina Chesnakov
cc4047@cumc.columbia.edu646-317-4244
PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATORLisa Kachnic, MD

Principal Investigator

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 6, 2026