A rectal cancer feasibility study with an embedded phase III trial design assessing magnetic resonance tumour regression grade (mrTRG) as a novel biomarker to stratify management by good and poor response to chemoradiotherapy (TRIGGER): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

被引:76
|
作者
Battersby, Nick J. [1 ,2 ]
Dattani, Mit [1 ]
Rao, Sheela [3 ]
Cunningham, David [3 ]
Tait, Diana [3 ]
Adams, Richard [4 ]
Moran, Brendan J. [1 ,2 ]
Khakoo, Shelize [5 ]
Tekkis, Paris [6 ]
Rasheed, Shahnawaz [6 ]
Mirnezami, Alex [7 ,8 ]
Quirke, Philip [9 ]
West, Nicholas P. [9 ]
Nagtegaal, Iris [10 ]
Chong, Irene [11 ]
Sadanandam, Anguraj [11 ]
Valeri, Nicola [11 ]
Thomas, Karen [12 ]
Frost, Michelle [13 ]
Brown, Gina [13 ]
机构
[1] Pelican Canc Fdn, Basingstoke RG24 9NN, Hants, England
[2] North Hampshire Hosp Fdn Trust, Basingstoke RG24 9NA, Hants, England
[3] Royal Marsden Hosp, Dept Med, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
[4] Velindre Canc Ctr Velindre Hosp Cardiff, Cardiff CF4 7XL, S Glam, Wales
[5] Royal Marsden Hosp, Gastrointestinal Unit, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
[6] Royal Marsden Hosp London, Dept Colorectal Surg, London SW3 6JJ, England
[7] Univ Southampton, Dept Surg, Southampton SO16 6YD, Hants, England
[8] Univ Southampton, Dept Tissue Microarray Anal, Southampton SO16 6YD, Hants, England
[9] St James Univ Hosp, Leeds Inst Canc & Pathol, Pathol & Tumour Biol, Wellcome Trust Brenner Bldg, Leeds LS9 7TF, W Yorkshire, England
[10] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Dept Pathol, NL-6500 HB Nijmegen, Netherlands
[11] Inst Canc Res, Div Mol Pathol, London SW3 6JB, England
[12] R&D Royal Marsden Hosp Sutton, Stat Unit, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
[13] Royal Marsden Hosp, Dept Radiol, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
来源
TRIALS | 2017年 / 18卷
关键词
Randomised control trial; Chemoradiotherapy; Rectal cancer; mrTRG; Complete response; Tumour regression; Tumour cell density; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; COMPLETE CLINICAL-RESPONSE; NEOADJUVANT CHEMORADIATION; COLORECTAL-CANCER; PREOPERATIVE CHEMORADIOTHERAPY; NONOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT; MERCURY EXPERIENCE; BOWEL DYSFUNCTION; THERAPY; OXALIPLATIN;
D O I
10.1186/s13063-017-2085-2
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Background: Pre-operative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) for MRI-defined, locally advanced rectal cancer is primarily intended to reduce local recurrence rates by downstaging tumours, enabling an improved likelihood of curative resection. However, in a subset of patients complete tumour regression occurs implying that no viable tumour is present within the surgical specimen. This raises the possibility that surgery may have been avoided. It is also recognised that response to CRT is a key determinant of prognosis. Recent radiological advances enable this response to be assessed pre-operatively using the MRI tumour regression grade (mrTRG). Potentially, this allows modification of the baseline MRI-derived treatment strategy. Hence, in a 'good' mrTRG responder, with little or no evidence of tumour, surgery may be deferred. Conversely, a 'poor response' identifies an adverse prognostic group which may benefit from additional pre-operative therapy. Methods/design: TRIGGER is a multicentre, open, interventional, randomised control feasibility study with an embedded phase III design. Patients with MRI-defined, locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma deemed to require CRT will be eligible for recruitment. During CRT, patients will be randomised (1:2) between conventional management, according to baseline MRI, versus mrTRG-directed management. The primary endpoint of the feasibility phase is to assess the rate of patient recruitment and randomisation. Secondary endpoints include the rate of unit recruitment, acute drug toxicity, reproducibility of mrTRG reporting, surgical morbidity, pathological circumferential resection margin involvement, pathology regression grade, residual tumour cell density and surgical/specimen quality rates. The phase III trial will focus on long-term safety, regrowth rates, oncological survival analysis, quality of life and health economics analysis. Discussion: The TRIGGER trial aims to determine whether patients with locally advanced rectal cancer can be recruited and subsequently randomised into a control trial that offers MRI-directed patient management according to radiological response to CRT (mrTRG). The feasibility study will inform a phase III trial design investigating stratified treatment of good and poor responders according to 3-year disease-free survival, colostomy-free survival as well as an increase in cases managed without a major resection.
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页数:14
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  • [1] A rectal cancer feasibility study with an embedded phase III trial design assessing magnetic resonance tumour regression grade (mrTRG) as a novel biomarker to stratify management by good and poor response to chemoradiotherapy (TRIGGER): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
    Nick J. Battersby
    Mit Dattani
    Sheela Rao
    David Cunningham
    Diana Tait
    Richard Adams
    Brendan J. Moran
    Shelize Khakoo
    Paris Tekkis
    Shahnawaz Rasheed
    Alex Mirnezami
    Philip Quirke
    Nicholas P. West
    Iris Nagtegaal
    Irene Chong
    Anguraj Sadanandam
    Nicola Valeri
    Karen Thomas
    Michelle Frost
    Gina Brown
    Trials, 18
  • [2] ASO Visual Abstract: The Relationship Between Baseline Rectal Tumour Length and Magnetic Resonance Tumour Regression Grade (mrTRG) Response to Chemoradiotherapy-A Subanalysis of the Trigger Feasibility Study
    Hodges, Nicola
    Battersby, Nicholas
    Rao, Sheela
    Brown, Gina
    ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 30 (8) : 4736 - 4736
  • [3] ASO Visual Abstract: The Relationship Between Baseline Rectal Tumour Length and Magnetic Resonance Tumour Regression Grade (mrTRG) Response to Chemoradiotherapy—A Sub-analysis of the Trigger Feasibility Study
    Nicola Hodges
    Nicholas Battersby
    Sheela Rao
    Gina Brown
    Annals of Surgical Oncology, 2023, 30 : 4736 - 4736