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Neoadjuvant irradiation of extremity soft tissue sarcoma with ions (Extrem-ion): study protocol for a randomized phase II pilot trial

The standard of care treatment for soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities is a wide resection in combination with pre- or postoperative radiotherapy with high local control rates, sparing patients the necessity of amputation without compromising on overall survival rates. The currently preferred tim...

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Published in:BMC cancer 2022-05, Vol.22 (1), p.538-8, Article 538
Main Authors: Brügemann, D, Lehner, B, Kieser, M, Krisam, J, Hommertgen, A, Jaekel, C, Harrabi, S B, Herfarth, K, Mechtesheimer, G, Sedlaczek, O, Egerer, G, Geisbüsch, A, Uhl, M, Debus, J, Seidensaal, K
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cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c628t-c2029de32aa358f4ed4b73d047d14e8eacc23ea704ee77183669a7a73be14123
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container_title BMC cancer
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creator Brügemann, D
Lehner, B
Kieser, M
Krisam, J
Hommertgen, A
Jaekel, C
Harrabi, S B
Herfarth, K
Mechtesheimer, G
Sedlaczek, O
Egerer, G
Geisbüsch, A
Uhl, M
Debus, J
Seidensaal, K
description The standard of care treatment for soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities is a wide resection in combination with pre- or postoperative radiotherapy with high local control rates, sparing patients the necessity of amputation without compromising on overall survival rates. The currently preferred timing of radiotherapy is under debate. Albeit having higher rates of acute wound complications, late side effects like fibrosis, joint stiffness or edema are less frequent in preoperative compared to postoperative radiotherapy. This can be explained in smaller treatment volumes and a lower dose in the preoperative setting. Particles allow better sparing of surrounding tissues at risk, and carbon ions additionally offer biologic advantages and are preferred in less radiosensitive tumors. Hypofractionation allows for a significantly shorter treatment duration. Extrem-ion is a prospective, randomized, monocentric phase II trial. Patients with resectable or marginally resectable, histologically confirmed soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities will be randomized between neoadjuvant proton or neoadjuvant carbon ion radiotherapy in active scanning beam application technique (39 Gy [relative biological effectiveness, RBE] in 13 fractions [5-6 fractions per week] in each arm). The primary objective is the proportion of therapies without wound healing disorder the first 120 days after surgery or discontinuation of treatment for any reason related to the treatment. The secondary endpoints of the study consist of local control, local progression-free survival, disease-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life. The aim of this study is to confirm that hypofractionated, preoperative radiotherapy is safe and feasible. The potential for reduced toxicity by the utilization of particle therapy is the rational of this trial. A subsequent randomized phase III trial will compare the hypofractionated proton and carbon ion irradiation in regards to local control. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04946357 ; Retrospectively registered June 30, 2021.
doi_str_mv 10.1186/s12885-022-09560-x
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Patients with resectable or marginally resectable, histologically confirmed soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities will be randomized between neoadjuvant proton or neoadjuvant carbon ion radiotherapy in active scanning beam application technique (39 Gy [relative biological effectiveness, RBE] in 13 fractions [5-6 fractions per week] in each arm). The primary objective is the proportion of therapies without wound healing disorder the first 120 days after surgery or discontinuation of treatment for any reason related to the treatment. The secondary endpoints of the study consist of local control, local progression-free survival, disease-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life. The aim of this study is to confirm that hypofractionated, preoperative radiotherapy is safe and feasible. The potential for reduced toxicity by the utilization of particle therapy is the rational of this trial. 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subjects Amputation
Carbon
Carbon - therapeutic use
Carbon ion therapy
Care and treatment
Clinical trials
Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic
Consent
Edema
Extremities
Extremity soft tissue sarcoma
Fibrosis
Health aspects
Humans
Hypofractionation
Ions
Ions - therapeutic use
Irradiation
Neoadjuvant therapy
Neoadjuvant Therapy - adverse effects
Patients
Pilot Projects
Prospective Studies
Proton therapy
Protons
Quality of Life
Radiation therapy
Radiotherapy
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Randomized trial
Sarcoma
Sarcoma - drug therapy
Sarcoma - radiotherapy
Sarcoma - surgery
Soft Tissue Neoplasms - drug therapy
Soft tissue sarcoma
Study Protocol
Surgery
Survival
Testing
Toxicity
Tumors
Wound healing
title Neoadjuvant irradiation of extremity soft tissue sarcoma with ions (Extrem-ion): study protocol for a randomized phase II pilot trial
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