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MCC-24-GYN-11: Comparison of Nodal Sampling in Endometrial Cancer
Sponsor: Rachel Miller
Summary
This study aims to estimate the recurrence-free survival rates in women with endometrial cancer treated with selective versus sentinel node surgical staging. This study will gather information to help determine the best way to evaluate lymph nodes during surgery for endometrial cancer.
Official title: Randomized Phase 3 Study of SELECTIVE SURGICAL STAGING Versus REFLEX Lymphadenectomy in Non-mappers Undergoing Sentinel Lymph Node Sampling for the Treatment of Endometrial Cancer
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
625
Start Date
2025-03-17
Completion Date
2030-01
Last Updated
2025-11-13
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Selective surgical staging
Intraoperative Consultation, performed by pathologist and surgeon jointly. The uterus is inspected for extra-corpus spread (cervix, parametria, adnexa, distant). The surgical pathologist will evaluate the uterus according to the IOC Worksheet and promptly notify the surgeon of the results. The IOC will include evaluation for extra-corpus disease, lesion measurement, frozen section (to confirm measured lesion is malignant, cell type, and re-grading of tumor). Non-sentinel nodes will be handled according to institutional standard-of-care practice.
REFLEX
The surgeon will perform a side-specific lymphadenectomy when there is no mapping on a hemipelvis (no tracer uptake in nodes). If neither side has successful Sentinel Node mapping, the surgeon performs a complete pelvic lymphadenectomy. Surgeons will remove the para-aortic lymph nodes at their discretion.
Locations (1)
University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky, United States