Literature DB >> 30688523

Challenges and solutions in the design and execution of the PROSPECT Phase II/III neoadjuvant rectal cancer trial (NCCTG N1048/Alliance).

Deborah Schrag1, Martin Weiser2, Leonard Saltz3, Harvey Mamon4, Marc Gollub5, Ethan Basch6, Alan Venook7, Qian Shi8.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: More than half of the 40,000 incident rectal cancer patients in the United States each year are diagnosed at clinical stage II and III (locally advanced stage). For this group, high rates of cure can be achieved with the combination of pelvic radiation and sensitizing 5-fluorouracil (chemoradiation), surgery and chemotherapy, but treatment is long, arduous and toxicities are substantial. The PROSPECT trial (N1048, NCT01515787) was designed to determine whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) could be used as an alternative to neoadjuvant chemoradiation without compromising treatment outcomes and to spare these patients excess toxicity. The statistical design balanced the twin co-primary goals of achieving low local and distant recurrence rates. Study design features contended with the need for stringent safeguards given limited phase II data, the need for straightforward criteria to facilitate both accrual and protocol fidelity and the importance of patients' perspectives on symptom burden and treatment toxicity.
METHODS: PROSPECT is an ongoing multi-site two-group seamless phase II/III randomized trial comparing standard neoadjuvant chemoradiation versus neoadjuvant chemotherapy with selective use of chemoradiation for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Challenges addressed in the design and conduct of PROSPECT have included the following: (1) setting safety thresholds given limited single-center phase II data, (2) establishing workable eligibility criteria, (3) balancing competing time to local and distant recurrence as co-primary endpoints and (4) obtaining reliable and complete data for patients' symptom burden. The design and implementation challenges, choices, modifications and their implications for the design of future national cooperative group clinical trials are presented.
RESULTS: PROSPECT incorporated stringent thresholds for both complete surgical resection (R0) and the time to local recurrence as early stopping rules. When predetermined stopping criteria were not met after evaluation of the first 366 participants in the randomized phase II, the study transitioned seamlessly to phase III with cumulative accrual of over 1000 participants. Eligibility criteria stipulating rectal tumor location based on distance from the anal verge were unworkable, and the protocol was amended to a more pragmatic approach that assigned surgeons with primary responsibility for determining eligibility. Central radiology review was feasible and in some cases prompted discontinuation of protocol treatment. Participation in toxicity reporting using the National Cancer Institute's Patient-Reported Outcomes Version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events was uniformly high and was well accepted by participants from over 200 sites in the United States, Canada and Switzerland.
CONCLUSION: The strategies used to overcome these obstacles may inform the design of other studies that involve multi-modality treatment interventions, particularly trials where implementation of consistent criteria for eligibility and outcomes across hundreds of practice settings is necessary.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Locally advanced rectal cancer; central radiology review of pelvic magnetic resonance imaging; chemoradiation; co-primary endpoints; combined modality treatment; neoadjuvant FOLFOX; patient-reported outcomes and symptom burden using Patient-Reported Outcomes Version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events; phase II/III hybrid design; pragmatic design elements in cooperative group cancer clinical trials; total mesorectal excision

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30688523      PMCID: PMC6440868          DOI: 10.1177/1740774518824539

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Trials        ISSN: 1740-7745            Impact factor:   2.486


  15 in total

1.  Are we overtreating rectal cancer: time for another trial?

Authors:  Peter W G Carne; Heidi Nelson
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 5.344

Review 2.  NIH consensus conference. Adjuvant therapy for patients with colon and rectal cancer.

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Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1990-09-19       Impact factor: 56.272

3.  Preoperative versus postoperative chemoradiotherapy for rectal cancer.

Authors:  Rolf Sauer; Heinz Becker; Werner Hohenberger; Claus Rödel; Christian Wittekind; Rainer Fietkau; Peter Martus; Jörg Tschmelitsch; Eva Hager; Clemens F Hess; Johann-H Karstens; Torsten Liersch; Heinz Schmidberger; Rudolf Raab
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2004-10-21       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Development of the National Cancer Institute's patient-reported outcomes version of the common terminology criteria for adverse events (PRO-CTCAE).

Authors:  Ethan Basch; Bryce B Reeve; Sandra A Mitchell; Steven B Clauser; Lori M Minasian; Amylou C Dueck; Tito R Mendoza; Jennifer Hay; Thomas M Atkinson; Amy P Abernethy; Deborah W Bruner; Charles S Cleeland; Jeff A Sloan; Ram Chilukuri; Paul Baumgartner; Andrea Denicoff; Diane St Germain; Ann M O'Mara; Alice Chen; Joseph Kelaghan; Antonia V Bennett; Laura Sit; Lauren Rogak; Allison Barz; Diane B Paul; Deborah Schrag
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 13.506

5.  Effect of the introduction of total mesorectal excision for the treatment of rectal cancer.

Authors:  E Carlsen; E Schlichting; I Guldvog; E Johnson; R J Heald
Journal:  Br J Surg       Date:  1998-04       Impact factor: 6.939

6.  Interim analyses for randomized clinical trials: the group sequential approach.

Authors:  S J Pocock
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  1982-03       Impact factor: 2.571

7.  A multiple testing procedure for clinical trials.

Authors:  P C O'Brien; T R Fleming
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  1979-09       Impact factor: 2.571

8.  End points for colon cancer adjuvant trials: observations and recommendations based on individual patient data from 20,898 patients enrolled onto 18 randomized trials from the ACCENT Group.

Authors:  Daniel J Sargent; Smitha Patiyil; Greg Yothers; Daniel G Haller; Richard Gray; Jacqueline Benedetti; Marc Buyse; Roberto Labianca; Jean Francois Seitz; Christopher J O'Callaghan; Guido Francini; Axel Grothey; Michael O'Connell; Paul J Catalano; David Kerr; Erin Green; Harry S Wieand; Richard M Goldberg; Aimery de Gramont
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2007-09-17       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Comparison of Patient- and Practitioner-Reported Toxic Effects Associated With Chemoradiotherapy for Head and Neck Cancer.

Authors:  Aaron D Falchook; Rebecca Green; Mary E Knowles; Robert J Amdur; William Mendenhall; David N Hayes; Juneko E Grilley-Olson; Jared Weiss; Bryce B Reeve; Sandra A Mitchell; Ethan M Basch; Bhishamjit S Chera
Journal:  JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 6.223

Review 10.  Integrated phase II/III clinical trials in oncology: a case study.

Authors:  Meihua Wang; James J Dignam; Qiang E Zhang; John F DeGroot; Minesh P Mehta; Sally Hunsberger
Journal:  Clin Trials       Date:  2012-11-22       Impact factor: 2.486

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  10 in total

1.  CD133 Expression Predicts Relapse in Patients With Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Treated With Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy.

Authors:  Haruka Oi; Takashi Okuyama; Shunya Miyazaki; Yuko Ono; Masatoshi Oya
Journal:  In Vivo       Date:  2021 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.155

Review 2.  Neoadjuvant Pelvic Radiotherapy in the Management of Rectal Cancer with Synchronous Liver Metastases: Is It Worth It?

Authors:  Maitham A Moslim; Amir L Bastawrous; D Rohan Jeyarajah
Journal:  J Gastrointest Surg       Date:  2021-06-07       Impact factor: 3.452

Review 3.  Current controversy, confusion, and imprecision in the use and interpretation of rectal MRI.

Authors:  Marc J Gollub; Chandana Lall; Neeraj Lalwani; Michael H Rosenthal
Journal:  Abdom Radiol (NY)       Date:  2019-11

4.  Measuring Rectal Cancer Tumor Height: Concordance Between Clinical Examination and MRI.

Authors:  Shannon M Navarro; Shuai Chen; Linda M Farkas
Journal:  Dis Colon Rectum       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 4.585

5.  Genomic and transcriptomic determinants of response to neoadjuvant therapy in rectal cancer.

Authors:  Walid K Chatila; Jin K Kim; Henry Walch; Michael R Marco; Chin-Tung Chen; Fan Wu; Dana M Omer; Danny N Khalil; Karuna Ganesh; Xuan Qu; Anisha Luthra; Seo-Hyun Choi; Yu-Jui Ho; Ritika Kundra; Katharine I Groves; Oliver S Chow; Andrea Cercek; Martin R Weiser; Maria Widmar; Iris H Wei; Emmanouil P Pappou; Garrett M Nash; Philip B Paty; Qian Shi; Efsevia Vakiani; S Duygu Selcuklu; Mark T A Donoghue; David B Solit; Michael F Berger; Jinru Shia; Raphael Pelossof; Paul B Romesser; Rona Yaeger; J Joshua Smith; Nikolaus Schultz; Francisco Sanchez-Vega; Julio Garcia-Aguilar
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2022-08-15       Impact factor: 87.241

Review 6.  Immunity, immunotherapy, and rectal cancer: A clinical and translational science review.

Authors:  Ebunoluwa E Otegbeye; Jonathan B Mitchem; Haeseong Park; Aadel A Chaudhuri; Hyun Kim; Matthew G Mutch; Matthew A Ciorba
Journal:  Transl Res       Date:  2020-12-08       Impact factor: 7.012

Review 7.  Challenges and shifting treatment strategies in the surgical treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer.

Authors:  Ho Seung Kim; Nam Kyu Kim
Journal:  Ann Gastroenterol Surg       Date:  2020-06-11

8.  Pathological Complete Response Following Different Neoadjuvant Treatment Strategies for Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

Authors:  S Hoendervangers; J P M Burbach; M M Lacle; M Koopman; W M U van Grevenstein; M P W Intven; H M Verkooijen
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 5.344

9.  Feasibility and Efficacy of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy without Radiotherapy for Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer.

Authors:  Katsuji Tokuhara; Yuki Matsui; Yosuke Ueyama; Kazuhiko Yoshioka; Mitsugu Sekimoto
Journal:  J Anus Rectum Colon       Date:  2022-01-28

10.  A randomized controlled trial comparing perioperative vs. postoperative mFOLFOX6 for lower rectal cancer with suspected lateral pelvic lymph node metastasis (JCOG1310): a phase II/III randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Masayuki Ohue; Satoru Iwasa; Junki Mizusawa; Yukihide Kanemitsu; Manabu Shiozawa; Yusuke Nishizawa; Hideki Ueno; Kenji Katsumata; Masayoshi Yasui; Shunsuke Tsukamoto; Hiroshi Katayama; Haruhiko Fukuda; Yasuhiro Shimada
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2022-08-05       Impact factor: 2.925

  10 in total

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