Estrogen Priming to Increase the Efficacy of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Operable Breast Cancer
NCT ID: NCT00193726
Last Updated: 2018-09-20
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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TERMINATED
PHASE3
273 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2005-07-31
2012-03-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The fraction of cells in cycle in breast cancer is low (5 to 10%) as determined by thymidine labeling index (4). Since most chemotherapeutic agents act preferentially or exclusively on cycling tumor cells, it is theoretically and intuitively appealing to increase the fraction of cycling cells to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy. One way to do it in breast cancer would be to administer estrogen, which is known to enhance the proliferation of breast cancer cells. Weichselbaum et al (5) demonstrated that low concentrations of estradiol (10-9 M) increased the fraction of cells in S-phase and enhanced the rate of cell proliferation in estrogen receptor positive MCF-7 breast cancer cell line. The cell kill of this cell line on exposure to cytosine arabinoside was enhanced. Others have shown that even estrogen receptor negative tumors have increased cell proliferation in response to estrogenic stimuli (6). This has been explained partly as a result of modulation of the kinetic response of cancer cells to other growth factors (7,8). There have been a number of randomized studies in literature to test the concept of kinetic recruitment of breast cancer cells by estrogens to increase the efficacy of chemotherapy (9-14). All these studies have used diethylstilbesterol (DES) for few days before standard chemotherapy for breast cancer to recruit cells into cycle and all these studies have been in patients with locally advanced (LABC) or metastatic breast cancer (MBC). The results of these studies have largely been negative. In the trial by Baldine et al (14) in LABC patients there was no difference in the response rates between DES-CAF and CAF arms (56% Vs 63%) and no difference in the overall (47 Vs 49 months) and progression free (21 Vs 24 months) survival. DES-CAF was found to be more myelotoxic compared to CAF alone, which resulted in reduced dose intensity in the former. In the trial by Conte et al (13) patients of MBC were randomized to DES-CEF versus CEF alone. Again, there was no difference in the response rages (49% Vs 57%) and overall survival (20 Vs 17 months) in between DES-CEF and CEF, the former being more myelotoxic. In the trial by Ingle et al (12) in MBC patients, the response to DES-CMF was higher (39% Vs 25%, p=0.06) compared to CMF alone but there was no difference in time to disease progression or survival. In the study by Paridaens et al (11) in LABC and MBC patients, ethinyl-estradiol plus CAF was compared to CAF. There was no difference in response rates, time to progression or survival in the two groups. Toxicities were also similar.
To summarize, the results of estrogenic recruitment in patients with LABC or MBC have been negative with respect to survival but some studies have shown a trend towards higher response rates in the recruitment arm. There are two possible explanations for these negative results. All these studies have been in metastatic or locally advance breast cancer patients. It is possible that the fraction of cells with inherent chemoresistance is higher in these patients compared to early stage patients and this would negate any beneficial effect of cell recruitment into cycle. Secondly, the total trial size has been small (less than 260) in all these studies and therefore they were grossly underpowered to detect meaningful differences between the two groups.
As a direct corollary of the negative effect of tamoxifen administered concomitantly with chemotherapy and the proven ability of estrogens to increase the proliferating fraction in breast cancer cells, we hypothesize a beneficial effect of estrogen priming on the efficacy of standard adjuvant chemotherapy in operable breast cancer. Since the effect is hypothesized on micrometastasis, it is likely that chemoresistance will be a lesser or no impediment.
Thus in a manner that is inverse to tamoxifen, estradiol could 'prime' the tumour for subsequent chemotherapy. Since only operable breast cancer patients who have undergone surgery and need adjuvant chemotherapy will be the test population, the estradiol priming will theoretically act on micrometastases that chemotherapy seeks to eradicate.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Arm B- Experimental
Tab Premarin 0.625 mg (Ethinyl estradiol) once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Tab Premarin (Ethinyl estradiol)
Tab Premarin 0.625 mg (Ethinyl estradiol) once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Arm A - Placebo
Tab Placebo once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Placebo
Placebo once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Interventions
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Tab Premarin (Ethinyl estradiol)
Tab Premarin 0.625 mg (Ethinyl estradiol) once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Placebo
Placebo once a day for 5 days prior to each cycle of chemotherapy
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
70 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Sudeep Gupta
OTHER_GOV
Responsible Party
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Sudeep Gupta
Professor of medical oncology
Principal Investigators
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Sudeep Gupta, MD, DM
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai-400012, India
Locations
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Tata Memorial Hospital
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Countries
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Related Links
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Study Institution
Other Identifiers
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122 of 2003
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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