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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07687225
NA

Surgery vs. No Surgery for Primary Tumor in De Novo Stage IV Breast Cancer With Solitary Bone Metastases

Sponsor: West China Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a national multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled trial. The study aims to compare the 5-year overall survival (OS) between patients receiving primary tumor surgery followed by systemic therapy (surgery group) and those receiving systemic therapy alone (non-surgery group) in patients with de novo Stage IV breast cancer who have solitary bone metastases. Secondary objectives include comparing progression-free survival (PFS), breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS), local control rates, patient-reported outcomes (BREAST-Q, QLQ-C30), safety (surgical complications and systemic therapy toxicities), and cost-effectiveness.

Official title: A National Multicenter, Prospective, Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Primary Tumor Surgery Followed by Systemic Therapy With Systemic Therapy Alone in Patients With De Novo Stage IV Breast Cancer and Solitary Bone Metastases

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

216

Start Date

2026-09-01

Completion Date

2036-12-31

Last Updated

2026-07-07

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Primary Tumor Resection

Surgical removal of the primary breast tumor. The procedure type (mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery) is determined by tumor size, location, and patient preference, and is performed by experienced breast surgeons following national guidelines. Axillary staging (sentinel node biopsy or dissection) is performed concurrently. Immediate breast reconstruction (prosthesis or autologous tissue) may be performed when indicated.

OTHER

Standard systemic therapy

Systemic treatment administered according to the patient's molecular subtype (HR+, HER2+, or Triple-negative) based on Chinese and international clinical guidelines. Regimens include, but are not limited to, endocrine therapy (e.g., letrozole, exemestane) with or without CDK4/6 inhibitors (e.g., palbociclib) for HR+/HER2- disease; anti-HER2 targeted therapy (e.g., trastuzumab, pertuzumab) combined with chemotherapy for HER2+ disease; and chemotherapy (e.g., taxanes, anthracyclines) with or without immunotherapy (e.g., pembrolizumab) for triple-negative disease. All patients with bone metastases routinely receive bone-modifying agents (zoledronic acid or denosumab).