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Proton Beam Therapy in the Treatment of Esophageal Cancer
Sponsor: Washington University School of Medicine
Summary
The investigators plan to include both operable and inoperable patients with esophagus cancer in this prospective trial. Since both proton and photon treatments are biologically equivalent, the investigators do not expect a difference in tumor control compared to intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). The investigators have a prospective experience of physician-reported toxicity and patient outcome using IMRT for patients with inoperable esophagus cancer that will serve as a comparison group. For the resectable patients receiving trimodality therapy (chemoradiation followed by surgery), the investigators will carefully track toxicity and patient outcomes prospectively. The central hypothesis is that the biologic efficacy for tumor control should be similar between protons and photons, and therefore survival measures should be similar between the two groups, but that the main difference lies in the total severe toxicities experienced by the patients undergoing therapy.
Official title: A Phase II Study of Proton Beam Therapy in the Treatment of Esophageal Cancer
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
22
Start Date
2018-04-19
Completion Date
2026-08-09
Last Updated
2026-04-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Proton beam therapy
* The daily prescription dose will be 1.8 or 2 Gy RBE ("Relative Biologic Equivalence") to be delivered to the periphery of the planning target volume (PTV). * The Mevion S-250 Proton Radiation Beam Therapy System will be used.
Patient-Reported Outcome Measures
-Prior to start of therapy, end of chemoradiation (day of end of treatment or up to 1 week after), 8 weeks, 4, 6, 9, and 12-months following end of chemoradiation
Locations (1)
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, United States