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RECRUITING
NCT06313450
NA

De-escalated Radiotherapy for Primary Tumor After Neoadjuvant Therapy With Toripalimab Plus Chemotherapy for Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

Sponsor: Sun Yat-sen University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

In the IMRT era, patients with stage II-III (AJCC8th) nasopharyngeal carcinoma achieve high local control. However, survivors are increasingly experiencing late radiation-induced toxicities. A previous study found that reducing the radiation dose to the primary site to 60Gy for patients who achieved partial or complete response to induction chemotherapy resulted in a lower rate of late toxicities and an inferior local control rate. The investigators aim to reduce the radiation dose to the primary site for patients after immunochemotherapy, given the potential of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and immunotherapy to increase response rates and long-term survival. The protocol includes participants with stage II-III (AJCC8th), except T2N0M0, to receive three courses of neoadjuvant gemcitabine plus cisplatin and Toripalimab. If the primary tumour regresses by over 75%, de-escalated radiotherapy with 60Gy will be administered, and participants will receive two cycles of cisplatin and three cycles of Toripalimab during the radiotherapy course. Otherwise, participants will receive conventional radiotherapy and concurrent chemotherapy with cisplatin for two cycles as usual. The aim of this study is to investigate the 3-year local control rate and toxicities of de-escalated radiotherapy.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

112

Start Date

2024-03-04

Completion Date

2028-02-01

Last Updated

2024-03-19

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

RADIATION

de-escalated radiotherapy

Enrolled patients receive three courses of induction therapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin, along with Toripalimab. After induction therapy, patients with a tumor volume regression of 75% or more and no detectable EBV DNA will receive de-escalated radiotherapy for the primary tumor with 60 Gy. During radiotherapy, patients will receive Cisplatin 100 mg/m2 every three weeks for two courses and Toripalimab 240 mg every three weeks for three courses. If patients do not achieve complete remission at the end of radiotherapy, 6 Gy will be added to the residual lesions.

RADIATION

conventional radiotherapy

Enrolled patients receive three courses of induction therapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin, along with Toripalimab. After induction therapy, patients with tumor volume regression less than 75% or EBV DNA copy number higher than 0 receive conventional radiotherapy for the primary tumor with 70 Gy. Patients will receive Cisplatin 100 mg/m2, every three weeks for two courses during radiotherapy.

Locations (1)

Sun Yat-Sen University Cancer Center

Guangzhou, Guangdong, China