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Postoperative Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Thymic Cancer (FUSCC-Thymic 3)

Recruiting
18 - 75 years of age
Both
Phase 3

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn the role of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients with thymic carcinoma and completed resection. The main questions it aims to answer are:

  1. Does adjuvant chemotherapy decrease disease progression?
  2. Does medium dose of three drugs (paclitaxel, cisplatin, 5-FU) well tolerance?

Researchers will compare chemoradiotherapy to radiotherapy to see whether chemoradiotherapy could decrease disease progression or not.

Participants will:

  1. Take radiotherapy (50Gy/25f) with or without 4 cycles of chemotherapy (TPF).
  2. Follow up every 3 months in the first two year, and then every 6 months.

Description

Thymic carcinomas are rare neoplasms found in the anterior mediastinum, with an incidence of 0.38 cases per 100,000 people. Surgery is the primary treatment for patients with thymic carcinomas, and complete surgical resection proves fundamental for enhancing survival. However, the necessity for adjuvant therapy and the optimal type thereof for patients who have undergone complete resection remain unclear due to the lack of high-quality studies.

Our previous retrospective study found that radiotherapy improved overall survival and disease progression free survival significantly for all patients with thymic carcinoma and completed resection, however, chemotherapy only improved disease progression free survival for patients of stage III/IV. We also found that chemotherapy regimens containing paclitaxel were an advantageous combination for thymic cancer, and 1 or 2 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy were better than more cycles, suggesting reduced dose chemotherapy.

DCF (docetaxel, cisplatin, 5-FU) or TPF (paclitaxel, cisplatin, 5-FU) were widely used in head and neck, esophageal, stomach, and anal canal cancer, and better effect were presented. However, the toxicity of full dose was too toxic to tolerate. Our previous experience in esophageal cancer found TPF with 2/3 of standard dose was well tolerance. Therefore, medium dose of TPF three drugs chemotherapy were chosed to balance efficacy and toxicity.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Voluntarily participate and sign an informed consent form in writing;
  2. Age range from 18 to 75 years old, regardless of gender;
  3. Within 3 months after the surgery is completed;
  4. Histologically diagnosed with thymic cancer;
  5. Complete resection based on surgical records, pathological reports, and postoperative imaging;
  6. Masaoka stage: I-III
  7. No severe hematopoietic function, heart, lung, liver, kidney dysfunction, or immune deficiency;
  8. White blood cells ≥ 3 × 109/L; Neutrophils ≥ 1.5 × 109/L; Hemoglobin ≥ 10 g/dL; Platelets ≥ 100 × 109/L; Total bilirubin ≤ 1.5 times the upper limit of normal value; AST (SGOT)/ALT (SGPT) ≤ 2.5 times the upper limit of normal value; Creatinine ≤ 1.5 times the upper limit of normal value;

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Having a second primary tumor (excluding cured non malignant melanoma of the skin, papillary thyroid carcinoma, stage I seminomatoma, cervical carcinoma in situ, or other curable tumors that have been tumor free for more than 3 years after treatment);
  2. Symptomatic coronary heart disease, left heart failure, uncontrollable seizures, or loss of self-awareness due to mental illness;
  3. Pregnancy and lactation period;
  4. Patients with drug addiction, chronic alcoholism and AIDS;
  5. Researchers believe that participants are not suitable for this experiment.

Study details

Thymic Carcinoma

NCT06402708

Fudan University

16 May 2024

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