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Feasibility of Circulating Tumor DNA Based Minimal Residual Disease-Guided Adjuvant Therapy in Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer With Neoadjuvant Treatment
Sponsor: Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital
Summary
For locally advanced gastric adenocarcinoma/esophagogastric junction adenocarcinoma, the currently recommended treatment strategy per clinical guidelines is radical gastrectomy combined with perioperative therapy (including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, etc.). This approach involves several cycles of neoadjuvant therapy prior to surgery, followed by the surgical procedure, and then several cycles of adjuvant therapy post-surgery. This regimen is generally considered to offer favorable efficacy, ultimately leading to improved survival outcomes for patients. However, some patients are unable to complete the prescribed postoperative adjuvant therapy due to factors such as poor physical condition after surgery or cumulative treatment toxicity. Findings from the retrospective SPACE-FLOT study preliminarily suggest that for patients with a favorable response to neoadjuvant therapy, postoperative adjuvant therapy may not confer additional survival benefit, while potentially increasing the risk of treatment-related adverse events. Therefore, the investigators aim to utilize the latest technological approaches to identify patients who could safely forgo adjuvant therapy, enabling personalized treatment decisions, reducing unnecessary treatment, and thereby maximizing patients' long-term survival benefits. To achieve this objective, the investigators have identified circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) testing as a potential solution. ctDNA refers to DNA fragments released by tumor cells into the extracellular space (e.g., into the bloodstream). By drawing a small amount of peripheral blood and analyzing the ctDNA within, it is possible to detect minimal residual disease (MRD) that is difficult to identify through conventional imaging methods (such as CT or MRI) after treatment. MRD is considered a critical factor that may lead to tumor recurrence. Utilizing ctDNA to detect MRD enables a convenient and accurate assessment of tumor status and treatment efficacy, thereby offering the potential for personalized treatment. Colorectal cancer represents a cancer type where ctDNA testing has been applied early and is relatively mature. In the field of colorectal cancer, the GALAXY study confirmed that ctDNA positivity can effectively predict patient survival outcomes, with superior performance to other traditional indicators. The study also found that patients with postoperative ctDNA MRD positivity tended to benefit from postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy, whereas those with ctDNA MRD negativity often did not derive such benefit. Subsequently, another randomized controlled trial (the DYNAMIC study) revealed that using ctDNA MRD to guide postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy strategies could effectively reduce unnecessary chemotherapy without adversely impacting patient survival outcomes. In the field of gastric cancer, studies such as MENCA-GC, CRITICS, and PLAGAST have all demonstrated that postoperative ctDNA can effectively predict patient prognosis in the treatment model of radical gastrectomy combined with perioperative therapy. Additionally, preliminary findings from the ongoing MRD-GATE study indicate that in treatment models without preoperative neoadjuvant therapy (i.e., surgery followed by adjuvant therapy), utilizing ctDNA MRD to guide postoperative adjuvant treatment can also reduce unnecessary chemotherapy without compromising patient survival outcomes. This study focuses on patients with locally advanced gastric cancer, integrating the latest clinical research advancements, and aims to fill the research gap concerning the efficacy of using ctDNA MRD to guide adjuvant therapy within the context of radical gastrectomy combined with perioperative therapy. This holds significant importance for optimizing treatment strategies and maximizing patient benefits.
Official title: Feasibility of Circulating Tumor DNA Based Minimal Residual Disease-Guided Adjuvant Therapy in Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer With Neoadjuvant Treatment: An Open-Label, Randomized, Multi-Centered Phase III Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
304
Start Date
2026-06-01
Completion Date
2032-03-31
Last Updated
2026-04-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Standard neoadjuvant therapy: Chemotherapy/Targeted Therapy/Immunotherapy
Participants will receive 4 cycles of neoadjuvant therapy based on CSCO/NCCN guidelines. The specific regimen is determined by molecular characteristics and clinical practice: 1. Chemotherapy: Options include SOX, DOS, FLOT, XELOX (CapeOx), or FOLFOX. 2. HER2-Positive: Trastuzumab combined with chemotherapy, with or without immunotherapy. 3. Immunotherapy: PD-(L)1 inhibitors may be administered as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy. Dosages and administration follow standard pharmaceutical labeling and institutional protocols.
Radical gastrectomy
Radical gastrectomy with standard D2 lymphadenectomy will be performed.
Standard adjuvant therapy: Chemotherapy/Targeted Therapy/Immunotherapy
For control arm, postoperative adjuvant therapy begins 4-6 weeks post-surgery and consists of 4 cycles. The regimen generally mirrors the neoadjuvant therapy received. Dosages and administration follow standard pharmaceutical labeling and institutional protocols. Patients deemed unsuitable for adjuvant therapy by experienced clinicians will undergo observation.
ctDNA-MRD-guided adjuvant therapy
Participants in the Experimental Arm will initially receive 4 cycles of neoadjuvant therapy followed by D2 radical gastrectomy. Postoperative management is strictly guided by ctDNA MRD status assessed at 4 weeks post-surgery: 1. ctDNA MRD-Negative Subgroup: Participants will not receive adjuvant therapy and will undergo active surveillance (observation). 2. ctDNA MRD-Positive Subgroup: Participants will receive 4 cycles of adjuvant therapy, initiating 4-6 weeks after surgery. The regimen generally mirrors the neoadjuvant therapy.
Locations (1)
Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University
Shanghai, Shanghai Municipality, China