Colon Cancer |
Cholangiocarcinoma |
Clinical Trial: Combination Chemotherapy in Treating Patients With Unresectable Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
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Purpose
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Combining more than one drug may kill more tumor cells. It is not yet known which regimen of combination chemotherapy is more effective for advanced colorectal cancer.
PURPOSE: Randomizedphase III trial to compare the effectiveness of fluorouracil combined with leucovorin and either irinotecan or oxaliplatin in treating patients who have unresectablemetastatic colorectal cancer.
| Condition | Treatment or Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| stage IV colon cancer Stage IV rectal cancer recurrent colon cancer recurrent rectal cancer adenocarcinoma of the colon adenocarcinoma of the rectum | Drug: fluorouracil Drug: irinotecan Drug: leucovorin calcium Drug: oxaliplatin Procedure: chemotherapy | Phase III |
MedlinePlus related topics: Colorectal Cancer
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment
Official Title: Phase III Randomized Study of Fluorouracil With Leucovorin Calcium and Either Irinotecan or Oxaliplatin in Patients With Unresectable Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
OBJECTIVES:
- Compare the efficacy of combination chemotherapy comprising fluorouracil (5-FU) with leucovorin calcium (CF) and either irinotecan (CPT-11) or oxaliplatin vs standard sequential single-agent therapy comprising 5-FU with CF followed by CPT-11 in patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer.
- Determine whether combination chemotherapy is best used as first-line therapy or reserved for second-line therapy after progression on first-line single-agent therapy in these patients.
- Compare the efficacy and toxicity of an irinotecan-containing regimen vs an oxaliplatin-containing regimen in these patients.
- Compare the overall survival, progression-free survival, and quality of life of patients treated with these regimens.
- Compare the safety and toxicity of these regimens in these patients.
OUTLINE: This is a randomized, open-label, multicenter study. Patients are randomized to one of five treatment arms.
- Arm I (standard therapy): Patients receive first-line chemotherapy comprising leucovorin calcium IV over 2 hours on day 1 followed by fluorouracil IV continuously over 46 hours on days 1-2 every 14 days. Patients with progressive disease then receive second-line therapy comprising irinotecan IV over 90 minutes on day 1 every 21 days.
- Arm II: Patients receive first-line chemotherapy as in arm I. Patients with progressive disease then receive second-line therapy comprising irinotecan IV over 30 minutes and leucovorin calcium IV over 2 hours on day 1 and fluorouracil IV continuously over 46 hours on days 1-2 every 14 days.
- Arm III: Patients receive first-line chemotherapy comprising irinotecan, leucovorin calcium, and fluorouracil as in second-line therapy of arm II.
- Arm IV: Patients receive first-line chemotherapy as in arm I. Patients with progressive disease then receive second-line therapy comprising leucovorin calcium IV and oxaliplatin IV over 2 hours on day 1 followed by fluorouracil IV continuously over 46 hours on days 1-2 every 14 days.
- Arm V: Patients receive first-line chemotherapy comprising leucovorin calcium, oxaliplatin, and fluorouracil as in second-line therapy of arm IV. Treatment continues in all arms in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Quality of life is assessed at baseline, at weeks 6 and 12, and then every 12 weeks thereafter.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 2,100 patients (700 in arm I and 350 each in arms II-V) will be accrued for this study.
Eligibility
Ages Eligible for Study: 18 Years and above, Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
- Histologically confirmed metastatic adenocarcinoma of the colon or rectum
- Unresectable disease
- Measurable or evaluable disease
- No partial or complete bowel obstruction
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS: Age:
- 18 and over
Performance status:
- WHO 0-2
Life expectancy:
- Not specified
Hematopoietic:
- WBC greater than 4,000/mm^3
- Platelet count greater than 150,000/mm^3
Hepatic:
- Bilirubin less than 1.25 times upper limit of normal (ULN)
- Alkaline phosphatase less than 5 times ULN
- AST or ALT less than 3 times ULN
- No Gilbert's syndrome or other congenital abnormality of biliary transport (e.g., Crigler-Najjar syndrome or Dubin-Johnson syndrome)
Renal:
- Creatinine clearance greater than 50 mL/min OR
- Glomerular filtration rate normal
Other:
- Not pregnant
- Negative pregnancy test
- Fertile patients must use effective contraception
- No other uncontrolled medical illness
- No other prior or concurrent malignancy that would preclude study entry
- No chronic diarrhea or inflammatory bowel disease
- No grade 2 or greater pre-existing neuropathy
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY: Biologic therapy:
- Not specified
Chemotherapy:
- At least 6 months since prior adjuvant chemotherapy
- Prior adjuvant fluorouracil allowed
- No prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease
- No prior oxaliplatin or irinotecan
Endocrine therapy:
- Not specified
Radiotherapy:
- Not specified
Surgery:
- No prior transplantation surgery requiring immunosuppressive therapy
Location Information
United Kingdom, England
Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit, London, England, NW1 2DA, United Kingdom
M.T. Seymour, MA, MD, FRCP, Study Chair, Medical Research Council
More Information
Clinical trial summary from the National Cancer Institute's PDQ® database
Publications
Seymour M: An update on the MRC FOCUS/CR08 trial: the first 300 patients. Br J Cancer 85(suppl 1): A-P45, 44, 2001.
Record last reviewed: March 2004
Last Updated: October 13, 2004
Record first received: January 6, 2001
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00008060
Health Authority: Unspecified
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005
Resources
- Activation of beta-catenin-Tcf signaling in colon cancer by mutations in beta-catenin or APC (Google Health)
- Asian Pacific Islander National Cancer Survivors Network (Asian and Pacific Islander American Health Forum)

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