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Conversion Therapy Plus Surgery and Radiotherapy for Retroperitoneal Nodal Metastases in Gastric Cancer

A Randomized, Controlled, Multicenter Phase II Study of Conversion Therapy Combined With Surgery and Radiotherapy for Retroperitoneal Lymph Node Metastases in Gastric Cancer

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT07007182
Enrollment
54
Registered
2025-06-05
Start date
2025-10-01
Completion date
2030-10-01
Last updated
2025-09-05

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

Conditions

Gastric Adenocarcinoma, Stomach Neoplasms

Keywords

Conversion therapy, Para-aortic lymph nodes, D2 gastrectomy, Radiotherapy, SOX regimen, Immunotherapy

Brief summary

This is a randomized, controlled, multicenter phase II clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of conversion therapy combined with radical gastrectomy and adjuvant radiotherapy targeting para-aortic (station 16) lymph nodes in patients with gastric adenocarcinoma and isolated station 16 nodal metastases. Eligible participants must have no evidence of peritoneal dissemination, visceral metastases, or non-regional lymphatic spread. Based on PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS), patients in the experimental arm will receive systemic therapy with SOX (S-1 plus oxaliplatin) with or without a PD-1 inhibitor, followed by D2 gastrectomy and postoperative adjuvant SOX chemotherapy, then intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) to the para-aortic region. The control arm will receive standard chemotherapy with CAPEOX or SOX, with or without immunotherapy, according to CPS status. The primary endpoint is progression-free survival (PFS), with secondary endpoints including overall survival (OS), objective response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), and safety. This study aims to explore whether the addition of locoregional treatment to systemic therapy improves long-term outcomes in this select patient population.

Detailed description

This study targets patients with gastric adenocarcinoma characterized by a low metastatic burden-specifically, isolated metastases to para-aortic (station 16) lymph nodes without evidence of peritoneal carcinomatosis, distant organ metastases, or non-regional lymph node involvement. Patients are stratified by PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS ≥1 vs. \<1) and receive first-line systemic conversion therapy with the SOX regimen (S-1 plus oxaliplatin), with or without a PD-1 inhibitor. In the experimental arm, patients demonstrating disease control (CR/PR/SD) undergo D2 radical gastrectomy, followed by five cycles of adjuvant SOX and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) targeting the station 16 nodal basin (45-50 Gy/25 fractions; positive nodes 56-60 Gy/25 fractions), with concurrent capecitabine or S-1. Maintenance immunotherapy continues for up to one year in CPS ≥1 patients. The control arm receives standard-of-care systemic treatment with CAPEOX or SOX ± immunotherapy, without surgery or radiotherapy. Tumor tissue, peripheral blood, and fecal samples will be collected at multiple time points for exploratory biomarker analyses, including tumor immune microenvironment profiling, tumor mutational burden (TMB), mismatch repair status (MSI), and circulating immune cell subsets. A total of 54 patients will be enrolled (2:1 randomization), with an accrual period of 18 months and 24 months of follow-up.

Interventions

The SOX regimen consists of oxaliplatin 130 mg/m² IV on day 1 plus oral S-1 (tegafur/gimeracil/oteracil) 40-60 mg twice daily, taken on days 1-14 followed by 7 days off, in a 21-day cycle. Experimental arm: 3 cycles before surgery, 5 cycles after surgery. Control arm: up to 8 cycles as standard systemic therapy.

DRUGCAPEOX regimen

The CAPEOX regimen consists of oxaliplatin 130 mg/m² IV on day 1 plus oral capecitabine 1000 mg/m² twice daily on days 1-14, repeated every 3 weeks (q3w), up to 8 cycles. Used as a standard chemotherapy option in the control arm, with or without PD-1 inhibitor according to PD-L1 CPS score.

DRUGPD-1 inhibitor

A PD-1 inhibitor is administered intravenously at a fixed dose of 200 mg every 3 weeks. It is combined with SOX in the experimental arm (CPS ≥1 patients) during conversion and adjuvant phases, and with CAPEOX or SOX in the control arm (CPS ≥1 patients). Maintenance PD-1 inhibitor continues for up to 1 year or until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.

RADIATIONPara-aortic lymph node radiotherapy (IMRT to station 16)

Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) is delivered postoperatively to the para-aortic (station 16) nodal basin. Elective nodal basin: 45-50 Gy in 25 fractions Positive nodes: 56-60 Gy in 25 fractions Radiotherapy is given concurrently with oral capecitabine or S-1 as radiosensitizers.

DRUGCapecitabine / S-1 (radiosensitizer during IMRT)

During para-aortic IMRT, patients receive concurrent oral capecitabine 825 mg/m² twice daily on radiation days, or oral S-1 dosed according to body surface area. These agents are used as radiosensitizers during postoperative radiotherapy.

Sponsors

Jinbo Yue
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion: Histologically confirmed gastric adenocarcinoma with isolated para-aortic (station 16) lymph node metastasis; pMMR or MSS subtype; ECOG performance status 0-2; Life expectancy ≥ 3 months; Adequate organ function (hematologic, hepatic, renal); Ability to provide tumor tissue for biomarker analysis; Ability to understand and willingness to sign written informed consent; Women of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test and agree to use effective contraception during study and for 12 months after treatment; men with partners of childbearing potential must also agree to contraception.

Exclusion criteria

Evidence of visceral or peritoneal metastasis; MSI-H or dMMR subtype; HER2-positive disease (IHC 3+ or IHC 2+ with FISH positive); Prior systemic anti-tumor therapy; Prior malignancy within 3 years (except adequately treated basal cell/squamous cell carcinoma of the skin or in situ carcinoma); Prior PD-1/PD-L1/CTLA-4 therapy; Participation in another interventional trial within 4 weeks; Active autoimmune disease requiring systemic therapy within past 2 years; Uncontrolled infection, hepatitis B, C, or HIV; CNS metastases or carcinomatous meningitis; Uncontrolled cardiovascular disease (unstable angina, recent MI, NYHA III-IV heart failure, QTc ≥480 ms); Interstitial lung disease or uncontrolled pulmonary disease; Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (FBG \>10 mmol/L); Pregnancy or breastfeeding; Major surgery within 4 weeks prior to randomization; Any other condition that may interfere with protocol compliance or increase risk as judged by the investigator.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Progression-Free Survival (PFS)2 yearsTime from randomization to disease progression according to RECIST 1.1 or death from any cause, whichever occurs first.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Overall Survival (OS)Up to 2 yearsTime from randomization to death from any cause.
Objective Response Rate (ORR)Up to 6 months after randomizationProportion of patients achieving complete or partial response according to RECIST 1.1.
Disease Control Rate (DCR)Up to 6 months after randomizationProportion of patients achieving complete response (CR), partial response (PR), or stable disease (SD) according to RECIST 1.1.
Adverse Events (Safety Profile)Through study completion (approx. 3 years)Incidence and grade of treatment-related adverse events according to CTCAE v5.0.

Contacts

Primary ContactJinbo Yue, MD, PhD
jbyue@sdfmu.edu.cn053167626442

Outcome results

None listed

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