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L'essai clinique NCT03215719 pour Carcinome oropharyngé, Carcinome épidermoïde oropharyngé VPH positif est en recrutement. Consultez la vue en carte du Radar des Essais Cliniques et les outils de découverte par IA pour tous les détails, ou posez vos questions ici.
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Adaptive Treatment De-escalation in Favorable Risk HPV-Positive Oropharyngeal Carcinoma Phase II 120 Design adaptatif

En recrutement
Les détails de l'essai clinique sont principalement disponibles en anglais. Cependant, l'IA Trial Radar peut vous aider ! Cliquez simplement sur 'Expliquer l'étude' pour voir et discuter des informations sur l'étude dans la langue sélectionnée.
L'essai clinique NCT03215719 est conçu pour étudier le traitement de Carcinome oropharyngé, Carcinome épidermoïde oropharyngé VPH positif. Il s'agit d'une étude interventionnel en Phase II. Son statut actuel est : en recrutement. L'étude a débuté le 18 octobre 2017 et vise à recruter 120 participants. Dirigée par NYU Langone Health, l'étude devrait être terminée d'ici le 1 décembre 2028. Les données du site ClinicalTrials.gov ont été mises à jour pour la dernière fois le 6 janvier 2026.
Résumé succinct
This is a phase II clinical trial. The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility of deescalating chemoradiation treatment based on mid-treatment tumor response determined by rapid nodal shrinkage and clearance of circulating HPV plasma tumor DNA . The primary objective of this study is to evaluate progression-free survival at 2 years.
Description détaillée
The secondary objectives will include 2-year loco-regional control and overall survival, quality of life, and late toxicity. Quality of life outcomes will be assessed with a validated, self-reported questionnaire. Late toxicity will be assessed using the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. Additionally, the prognostic value of positive HPV in salivary rinse as well as plasma at m...Afficher plus
Titre officiel

Adaptive De-escalation of Radiation Therapy Dose in HPV-Positive Oropharyngeal Carcinoma (ART) Demonstrating Favorable Mid-Treatment Response

Pathologies
Carcinome oropharyngéCarcinome épidermoïde oropharyngé VPH positif
Autres identifiants de l'étude
  • 17-00330
Numéro NCT
Date de début (réel)
2017-10-18
Dernière mise à jour publiée
2026-01-06
Date de fin (estimée)
2028-12
Inscription (estimée)
120
Type d'étude
Interventionnel
PHASE
Phase II
Statut
En recrutement
Mots clés
Radiation Therapy
Objectif principal
Traitement
Méthode d'allocation
Non randomisé
Modèle d'intervention
Séquentiel
Masquage
Aucun (ouvert)
Bras / Interventions
Groupe de participants/BrasIntervention/Traitement
ExpérimentalArm 1: Dose de-escalation (6 weeks)
26 participants demonstrating a favorable response defined as \>40% nodal shrinkage were eligible to receive the de-escalated treatment regimen (6 doses of weekly cisplatinum with 6 weeks of radiation to a total dose of 60Gy). This arm is closed and has been replaced with Arm 3.
Dose-Deescalated Treatment
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is an advanced type of radiation therapy used to treat cancer and noncancerous tumors. IMRT uses advanced technology to manipulate photon and proton beams of radiation to conform to the shape of a tumor. Patients will be treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with megavoltage photons
Cisplatinum
Standard of care chemotherapy
Comparateur actifArm 2: Standard radiation therapy + cisplatinum (7 weeks)
Participants will receive standard radiation therapy and cisplatinum for 7 weeks.
Standard Radiation Treatment
An interval scan at 4 weeks to assess for a good response defined as \>40% nodal shrinkage will stratify patients into receiving standard treatment (≤40% nodal shrinkage) or a dose-deescalated treatment regimen (\>40% nodal shrinkage). Those with nodal shrinkage and clearance of circulating plasma HPV DNA shall undergo further treatment de-escalation.
Dose-Deescalated Treatment
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is an advanced type of radiation therapy used to treat cancer and noncancerous tumors. IMRT uses advanced technology to manipulate photon and proton beams of radiation to conform to the shape of a tumor. Patients will be treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with megavoltage photons
Cisplatinum
Standard of care chemotherapy
ExpérimentalArm 3: Dose de-escalation (6 weeks)
For participants who achieve (a) rapid nodal shrinkage on interval CT scan but slow / unknown ctHPV DNA clearance OR (b) slow nodal shrinkage on interval CT scan but rapid ctHPV DNA clearance at week 4, radiation treatment will be de-escalated to a total dose of 60Gy/6 weeks with 6 doses of weekly (cisplatinum). This arm replaced Arm 1.
Dose-Deescalated Treatment
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is an advanced type of radiation therapy used to treat cancer and noncancerous tumors. IMRT uses advanced technology to manipulate photon and proton beams of radiation to conform to the shape of a tumor. Patients will be treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with megavoltage photons
Cisplatinum
Standard of care chemotherapy
ExpérimentalArm 4: Dose de-escalation (5 weeks)
For participants who achieve both a favorable nodal response (\>40%) on interval CT scan as well as rapid ctHPV DNA clearance at week 4, radiation treatment will be further de-escalated to a total dose of 50 Gy/5 weeks with 5 doses of weekly cisplatinum).
Dose-Deescalated Treatment
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is an advanced type of radiation therapy used to treat cancer and noncancerous tumors. IMRT uses advanced technology to manipulate photon and proton beams of radiation to conform to the shape of a tumor. Patients will be treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with megavoltage photons
Cisplatinum
Standard of care chemotherapy
Critère principal d'évaluation
Critères d'évaluationDescription de la mesurePériode
Progression-free survival at 2 years
The non-inferiority (NI) analysis will be conducted on the pooled de-escalated cohort (Arms 3+4 combined) to evaluate whether the 2-year PFS is acceptable relative to the historical benchmark. For Arm 3 and Arm 4 separately, Kaplan-Meier curves and 2-year PFS estimates with 95% confidence intervals will be provided. Patients who do not experience progression of disease and have not died will be censored on the date of last follow up.
2 Years
Assistant à la participation
Critères d'éligibilité

Âges éligibles
Adulte, Adulte âgé
Âge minimum
18 Years
Sexes éligibles
Tous
  • Pathologically (histologically or cytologically) proven diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx, which include the sites tonsil, base of tongue, soft palate, or posterior oropharyngeal wall. Histologic variants will be included (papillary squamous cell carcinoma and basaloid squamous cell carcinoma). Cytologic diagnosis from a cervical lymph node is sufficient in the presence of clinical evidence of a primary tumor in the oropharynx.

  • If the primary site is biopsied, Patient's tissue must be positive for p16 by immunohistochemical staining (>70% staining). Fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy specimens may be used as the sole diagnostic tissue if formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded cell block material is not available for p16 immunohistochemistry.

  • Patients must have detectable HPV ctDNA Score Report at Screening or have a detectable baseline HPV ctDNA Score Report (Naveris test) if no primary site is biopsied. Must have detectable screening plasma HPV DNA (also referred to as ctHPV DNA).

  • Clinical stage T1-T3, N1-N2b (AJCC 7th Edition) with no distant metastases based on the following diagnostic workup:

  • Fiberoptic exam with laryngopharyngoscopy (mirror and/or fiberoptic and/or direct procedure) within 8 weeks prior to registration.

  • One of the following combinations of imaging is required within 8 weeks of registration:

    1. CT scan of the neck (with contrast) and a PET/CT of neck and chest (with or without contrast);
    2. Or an MRI of the neck (with contrast) and a PET/CT of neck and chest (with or without contrast)
    3. Note: A CT scan of the neck and/or a PET/CT performed for the purposes of radiation planning may serve as both staging and planning tools.
  • Patients must provide their personal smoking history prior to registration. Patients cannot have a cumulative personal smoking history that exceeds 10 pack-years.

    1. Number of pack-years = \[Frequency of smoking (number of cigarettes per day) x duration of cigarette smoking (years)\] / 20
    2. Note: Twenty cigarettes is considered equivalent to one pack. Cigar and pipe tobacco consumption is not included in calculating lifetime pack-years.
  • Zubrod Performance Status of 0-1 within 8 weeks prior to registration;

  • Adequate hematologic function within 2 weeks prior to registration, defined as follows:

Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) ≥ 1,500 cells/mm3; Platelets ≥ 100,000 cells/mm3; Hemoglobin ≥ 8.0 g/dl; Note: the use of transfusion or other intervention to achieve Hgb ≥ 8.0 g/dl is acceptable.

  • Adequate renal function within 2 weeks prior to registration, defined as follows:

    a.Serum creatinine ≤ 1.5 mg/dl or creatinine clearance (CC) ≥ 50 ml/min determined by 24 hour collection or estimated by Cockcorft-Gault formula: i.CCr male = \[(140 - age) x (wt in kg)\] \[(Serum Cr mg/dl) x (72)\] ii.CCr female = 0.85 x (CrCl male)

  • Negative serum pregnancy test within 14 days prior to registration for women of childbearing potential;

  • Patients who are HIV positive but who have no prior AIDS-defining illness and have CD4 cells of at least 350/mm3 are eligible. HIV-positive patients must not have multi-drug resistant HIV infection or other concurrent AIDS-defining conditions. Patients must not be sero-positive for Hepatitis B (Hepatitis B surface antigen positive or anti-hepatitis B core antigen positive) or sero-positive for Hepatitis C (anti-Hepatitis C antibody positive). However, patients who are immune to hepatitis B (anti-Hepatitis B surface antibody positive) are eligible (e.g. patients immunized against hepatitis B).

  • The patient must provide study-specific informed consent prior to study entry.

  • Missing or undetectable baseline plasma HPV DNA level

  • Cancers considered to be from an oral cavity site (oral tongue, floor of mouth, alveolar ridge, buccal or lip), or the nasopharynx, hypopharynx, or larynx, even if p16 positive;

  • Carcinoma of the neck of unknown primary site origin (even if p16 positive);

  • Distant metastasis or adenopathy below the clavicles;

  • Gross total excision of both primary and nodal disease; this includes tonsillectomy, local excision of primary site, and nodal excision that removes all clinically and radiographically evident disease.

  • Simultaneous primary cancers or separate bilateral primary tumor sites;

  • Prior invasive malignancy (except non-melanomatous skin cancer) unless disease free for a minimum of 1095 days (3 years) (for example, carcinoma in situ of the breast, oral cavity, or cervix are all permissible);

  • Prior systemic chemotherapy for the study cancer; note that prior chemotherapy for a different cancer is allowable;

  • Prior radiotherapy to the region of the study cancer that would result in overlap of radiation therapy fields;

  • Severe, active co-morbidity defined as follows:

    1. Unstable angina and/or congestive heart failure requiring hospitalization within the last 6 months;
    2. Transmural myocardial infarction within the last 6 months;
    3. Acute bacterial or fungal infection intravenous antibiotics at the time of registration;
    4. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbation or other respiratory illness requiring hospitalization or precluding study therapy within 30 days of registration;
    5. Hepatic insufficiency resulting in clinical jaundice and/or coagulation defects; note, however, that laboratory tests for liver function and coagulation parameters are not required for entry into this protocol other than those listed in 4.1.10.
    6. Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) based upon the current CDC definition with immune compromise greater than that noted in section 4.1.12; note, however, that HIV testing is not required for entry into this protocol. The need to exclude patients with AIDS from this protocol is necessary because the treatments involved in this protocol may be significantly immunosuppressive. Protocol-specific requirements may also exclude immune-compromised patients.
  • Pregnancy; this exclusion is necessary because the treatment in this study may be significantly teratogenic

  • Prior allergic reaction to cisplatin.

  • Exclusion Criteria for MRI: Normal MRI exclusion criteria will apply, including those on the following list. A standard MRI safety form will be used to identify potential conditions warranting exclusion.

  • Electrical implants such as cardiac pacemakers or perfusion pumps

  • Ferromagnetic implants such as aneurysm clips, surgical clips, prostheses, artificial heart, valves with steel parts, metal fragments, shrapnel, bullets, tattoos near the eye, or steel implants

  • Ferromagnetic objects such as jewelry or metal clips in clothing

  • Claustrophobia

  • History of seizures

  • Patients with GFR < 15 ml/min/1.73m2 or who are on dialysis will not have DCE-MRI scan. These patients will have conventional anatomical MRI without contrast.

NYU Langone Health logoNYU Langone Health
Contact central de l'étude
Contact: Kenneth Hu, 212-731-5003, [email protected]
Contact: Fraustina Hsu, [email protected]
1 Centres de l'étude dans 1 pays

New York

New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York, 10016, United States
Kenneth Hu, Contact, 212-731-5003, [email protected]
Kenneth Hu, MD, Investigateur principal
En recrutement