Salivary Gland Cancer, Childhood |
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Clinical Trial: Chemotherapy in Treating Children With Liver Cancer
This study is currently recruiting patients.
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Purpose
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. It is not yet known which chemotherapy regimen is more effective in treating children with liver cancer.
PURPOSE: Randomized phase III trial to study the effectiveness of cisplatin with or without doxorubicin and the effectiveness of combining cisplatin, carboplatin, and doxorubicin in treating children who have liver cancer.
| Condition | Treatment or Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| childhood hepatoblastoma childhood hepatocellular carcinoma childhood liver cancer | Drug: carboplatin Drug: cisplatin Drug: doxorubicin Procedure: chemotherapy Procedure: conventional surgery Procedure: surgery | Phase III |
MedlinePlus related topics: Liver Cancer
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment
Official Title: Phase III Randomized Study of Cisplatin With or Without Doxorubicin in Children With Standard Risk Hepatoblastoma and Cisplatin, Carboplatin, and Doxorubicin in Children With High Risk Hepatoblastoma or Hepatocellular Carcinoma
OBJECTIVES:
- Compare the efficacy of cisplatin with or without doxorubicin in terms of tumor response, complete resection rate, overall survival, and event free survival in children with standard risk hepatoblastoma.
- Compare the toxicity of cisplatin with or without doxorubicin in this patient population.
- Evaluate whether an intensive multiagent regimen including carboplatin, cisplatin, and doxorubicin improves the response rate to chemotherapy and subsequent resection rate of children with high risk hepatoblastoma or hepatocellular carcinoma.
OUTLINE: This is a randomized, multicenter study. All hepatoblastoma patients are intended to be treated with primary chemotherapy. Hepatoblastoma patients are stratified by risk (standard vs high).
Patients receive cisplatin IV over 24 hours on day 1, beginning within 15 days of diagnosis. Standard risk patients are then randomized to one of two treatment arms. High risk hepatoblastoma patients and hepatocellular carcinoma patients receive a separate multiagent regimen.
- Arm I: Patients receive cisplatin IV over 24 hours and doxorubicin IV over 48 hours beginning on day 15. Treatment repeats every 21 days for a maximum of 5 courses. Tumor response is evaluated prior to the second course. Patients with responsive disease receive the remaining 2 courses of the preoperative phase, then undergo delayed primary surgery if their tumors are deemed resectable, prior to receiving 2 additional courses of chemotherapy. Patients whose tumors are still unresectable after 3 courses receive 2 more courses of chemotherapy, then undergo surgery if feasible. Patients with stable disease are considered for radical surgery or salvage chemotherapy. Patients with unresectable tumors after 5 courses may be considered for liver transplant or salvage chemotherapy.
- Arm II: Patients receive cisplatin IV over 24 hours every 15 days for a maximum of 5 additional courses. Tumor response is evaluated after the second course. Patients with responsive disease receive another 2 courses of cisplatin. Patients with resectable tumors after 4 courses undergo delayed primary surgery, then receive 2 more courses of cisplatin. Patients whose tumors are still unresectable after 4 courses receive 2 more courses of cisplatin, then undergo surgery if their tumors are resectable. Patients with stable disease may be moved to the high risk regimen or considered for radical surgery. Patients with unresectable tumors after 6 courses may be considered for liver transplant or salvage chemotherapy. Patients with high risk hepatoblastoma or unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma receive cisplatin IV over 24 hours on days 29, 57, and 85, and carboplatin IV over 1 hour followed by doxorubicin IV over 48 hours on days 15, 43, and 71. Patients with responsive resectable disease undergo surgery either after day 43 or within 3 weeks of day 85 of preoperative chemotherapy, then receive another 2 courses of carboplatin and doxorubicin on days 1 and 29 post surgery, and one more course of cisplatin on day 15 post surgery, for a total of 5 courses each. Patients with responsive but unresectable disease after day 85 also receive 2 more courses of carboplatin and doxorubicin alternating with 1 course of cisplatin. Definitive surgery will be re-considered after these further courses of chemotherapy. Patients with stable disease at day 43 or a tumor that remains unresectable after completion of chemotherapy may be considered for liver transplant.
Patients with a resectable hepatocellular carcinoma have primary surgery followed by alternating courses of cisplatin, and carboplatin and doxorubicin for a total of 4 courses of cisplatin and 3 courses of carboplatin and doxorubicin.
Patients are followed every 2-3 months for 2 years, every 6 months for 1 year, then annually thereafter.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 170-260 patients (85-130 patients per treatment arm) will be accrued for this study over 5.5 years.
Eligibility
Ages Eligible for Study: up to 16 Years, Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
- Histologically proven hepatoblastoma or hepatocellular carcinoma
- Diagnostic surgical biopsy strongly recommended for all patients and mandatory for the following:
- Children under 6 months of age
- Children over 3 years of age
- Patients with a normal serum alfa-fetoprotein (alfa-FP)
- Compatible imaging and raised serum alfa-FP level mandatory if no biopsy performed
- Standard risk disease:
- Tumors involving no more than 3 hepatic sections
- No extrahepatic abdominal disease
- No metastases
- High risk disease:
- Tumors involving all 4 hepatic sections AND/OR
- Evidence of extrahepatic metastases or abdominal disease
- Presence or absence of metastatic disease must be documented by chest x-ray and/or lung CT scan
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS: Age:
- 16 and under at diagnosis
Performance status:
- Not specified
Life expectancy:
- Not specified
Hematopoietic:
- Not specified
Hepatic:
- Not specified
Renal:
- Not specified
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY: Biologic therapy:
- Not specified
Chemotherapy:
- Not specified
Endocrine therapy:
- Not specified
Radiotherapy:
- Not specified
Surgery:
- See Disease Characteristics
- Prior surgery allowed
Location and Contact Information
Italy
University of Padova, Padova, 35128, Italy; Recruiting
Giorgio Perilongo, MD, Study Chair, University of Padova
More Information
Clinical trial summary from the National Cancer Institute's PDQ® database
Publications
Brock P, Shafford E, Brugieres L, et al.: Metastatic hepatoblastoma (HB) treated with a dose intensive multiagent chemotherapy regimen, results from the second study of the Childhood Liver Tumour Strategy Group of the International Society of Pediatric Oncology- SIOPEL 2. [Abstract] Proceedings of the American Society of Clinical Oncology 21: A-1603, 2002.
Perilongo G, Shafford E, Brugieres L, et al.: Cisplatin (CDDP) alone and delayed surgery, an effective treatment for standard risk (SR) hepatoblastoma (HB), the most relevant finding of the SIOPEL2. [Abstract] Proceedings of the American Society of Clinical Oncology 21: A-1571, 2002.
Plaschkes J. Proceedings of an international research workshop on pediatric liver tumours, 18-20 March 1999, Berne, Switzerland. Into the year 2000. Med Pediatr Oncol. 2001 Mar;36(3):380-2. No abstract available.
Perilongo G, Shafford E, Plaschkes J. SIOPEL trials using preoperative chemotherapy in hepatoblastoma. Lancet Oncol. 2000 Oct;1:94-100. Review.
Record last reviewed: December 2002
Last Updated: December 6, 2004
Record first received: November 1, 1999
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00003912
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 8, 2005

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