Degli Infermi Hospital, Oncology Unit, Faenza, Italy
Stefano Tamberi , Elisa Grassi , Maria aurelia Barbera , Jody Corbelli , Giorgio Papiani , Isacco Montroni , Maria Di Bartolomeo , Stefano Cascinu , Marina Marzola , Andrea Bonetti , Giovanni Frassineti , Carmine Pinto , Chiara Zingaretti , Oriana Nanni , Chiara Carli Moretti , Ilaria Panzini , Giulio Rossi , Giampaolo Ugolini
Background: The standard treatment for cT3-4 N0-1 rectal cancer is preoperative chemo-radiation therapy (CT/RT). The combination of capecitabine plus long course radiotherapy (RT) is standard therapy in this setting. Pathologic Complete remission (pCR) can be considered as surrogate end point of efficacy of treatment in terms of disease free survival (DFS). Clinical complete remission (cCR) is an important endpoint for “wait and see” strategy. In the PACIFIC trial in non-small cell lung cancer the patients were treated with durvalumab maintenance after CT/RT with advantage in progression free survival. Preclinical data points heavily toward a strong synergy between RT and immune treatments. Furthermore, a systemic effect of RT is possible when enhanced by targeted immune treatments. Methods: This is a prospective phase II, open label, single arm, multi-centre study to evaluate the activity of an innovative sequence in operable rectal cancer: standard concomitant CT/RT therapy with 825 mg/m2 twice daily capecitabine every day and 5040 cGy radiotherapy for 5 days per week for 5 weeks followed by 1500 mg Q4W durvalumab for 3 administration. After 9-10 weeks from neoadjuvant therapy will be performed re-staging with CT and MRI scan. Surgery will be performed at week 10-12 from the end of CT/RT. Primary Objective: pCR rate, defined as a TRG 3-4 according to DWORAK criteria. Secondary Objectives: Safety of treatment with durvalumab; cCR rate after durvalumab treatment before surgery and DFS. cCR will be evaluated with clinical, endoscopic and radiological assessment to look for evidence of residual disease. DFS will be evaluated during a follow up of 5 years. Exploratory Objective: Biological translational analysis of tumor biomarkers will be performed on the endoscopy biopsy done at the diagnosis and on the biopsy performed after the CT/RT prior to treatment with durvavalumab. We hypothesize that the addition of durvalumab after standard CT/RT for the treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer may improve the pathological response rate and we have planned to enlist 60 patients in 7 centers with an enrollment period of 12 months, already underway. Clinical trial information: NCT04083365
Disclaimer
This material on this page is ©2024 American Society of Clinical Oncology, all rights reserved. Licensing available upon request. For more information, please contact licensing@asco.org
Abstract Disclosures
2022 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Stefano Tamberi
2021 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Stefano Tamberi
2023 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium
First Author: Jun Watanabe
2024 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium
First Author: Meng Wang