Protocol for the Study and Treatment of Participants With Intraocular Retinoblastoma
NCT ID: NCT01783535
Last Updated: 2024-04-16
Study Results
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Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
PHASE2
174 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-06-19
2028-01-31
Brief Summary
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PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
* To evaluate the response (complete + partial response) rate of bilateral disease participants who have at least one eye with advanced intraocular retinoblastoma (Stratum B) to two upfront courses of therapy consisting of subconjunctival carboplatin and systemic topotecan.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
* To evaluate the ocular survival of eyes and event-free survival of participants by strata.
* To prospectively analyze intraocular disease tissue for participants with at least one eye undergoing enucleation in order to identify the mechanism of RB1 bi-allelic inactivation. Participants may undergo upfront enucleation (due to advanced disease at diagnosis) or may receive enucleation due to progressive disease during protocol therapy.
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Detailed Description
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TREATMENT PLAN
STRATUM A:
* Children ≥ or equal to 6 months old at time of enrollment - 8 courses of vincristine and carboplatin, given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Infants \< 6 months old at time of enrollment - Therapy will consist of six courses of chemotherapy; three courses of vincristine and carboplatin, given at 3-4 week intervals, alternating with 3 cycles of vincristine and topotecan, given at 3-4 week intervals.
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team. Focal therapies will include cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermo-therapy and plaque radiotherapy.
STRATUM B:
* Participants without extensive sub-retinal (SR) seeding, treatment will consist of two up-front courses of vincristine and topotecan, given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Participants without SR seeding: ≥ or equal to partial response after 2 cycles, will receive three additional courses of vincristine-topotecan (VT) and six courses of vincristine-carboplatin, given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Participants without SR seeding and \< partial response after 2 cycles VT will receive 6 courses of vincristine-carboplatin-etoposide (VCE), given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Participants with extensive sub-retinal (SR) seeding will receive two up-front courses of subconjunctival (also called subtenon or periocular) CARBOplatin and systemic topotecan, given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Participants with SR seeding: \> or equal to partial response after 2 cycles will receive three additional courses of vincristine-topotecan, and six courses of vincristine-carboplatin, given at 3-4 week intervals.
* Participants with SR seeding: \< partial response after 2 cycles will receive 6 courses of VCE, given at 3-4 week intervals.
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team. Focal therapies will include cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermo-therapy and plaque radiotherapy.
STRATUM C:
Participants with unilateral (unifocal or multifocal) advanced (R-E IV-V and IC D-E) intraocular disease will undergo enucleation. Adjuvant therapy will be based on histopathology:
* low risk participants: Participants in whom the enucleated eye does not show extra-retinal disease (see definition of intermediate and high risk below); will not receive any additional treatment.
* intermediate risk participants: Participants in whom the enucleated eye shows presence of tumor in the anterior chamber, invasion of the ciliary body/iris, massive invasion of the choroid, and invasion of the optic nerve beyond the lamina cribrosa with concomitant invasion of the choroid, will receive 4 courses of adjuvant chemotherapy with vincristine-carboplatin-doxorubicin (VCD).
* high risk participants: Participants in whom the enucleated eye shows involvement of the sclera, or involvement of the optic nerve at the level of the cut-end, will be treated with 6 courses of chemotherapy, with alternating courses of VCE and VCD.
* High-risk participants with extra-ocular extension (i.e. tumor extending beyond the sclera/cornea or beyond the cut end of the optic nerve) will be candidates for external-beam radiation therapy (EBRT) to the entire orbit, including the optic nerve, administered after 2 or 3 courses of treatment. Patients with extra-ocular extension may be considered for enrollment on an alternative therapeutic protocol for metastatic retinoblastoma (or best clinical management).
STRATUM D:
Management of participants with bilateral retinoblastoma is often complex; and some participants will have one eye enucleated upfront due to advanced disease. The decision for enucleation will be made after thorough consideration by the treating team. The treatment of the remaining eye will depend on a combination of two factors: a) R-E group of the remaining eye, and b) Histology of the enucleated eye. Though we have accumulated some information regarding the use of vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin in the treatment of intraocular retinoblastoma, it is not considered standard of care. Therefore, participants with intermediate and high risk features will be treated with 6 courses of vincristine, carboplatin, and etoposide (VCE). Those participants in whom the enucleated eye shows only low risk histology will be eligible to proceed with either stratum A or stratum B therapy. For those receiving stratum B therapy, consideration of periocular carboplatin will be allowed. External beam or proton beam radiation therapy will be considered for patients with extra-ocular extension.
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team. Focal therapies will include cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermo-therapy and plaque radiotherapy.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Stratum A
Participants with early bilateral or unilateral (unifocal or multifocal) retinoblastoma (R-E I-III, IC A-B; R-E IV with IC A or B; or IC C with limited sub-retinal seeding), and participants with bilateral disease in whom the advanced eye has been enucleated upfront (without any high risk histopathology) and the remaining eye has early stage disease (as defined above).
Interventions (see detailed description): vincristine, carboplatin, topotecan, filgrastim or PEG-filgrastim, and focal therapy, including cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermo-therapy, plaque radiotherapy.
vincristine
Given via minibag/gravity flow.
topotecan
Given IV over 30 minutes.
filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
PEG-filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until ANC is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
carboplatin
Given IV over 60 minutes. Given periocular (subtenon/subconjunctival).
focal therapy
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team to strata A, B and D. In select cases of very early stage retinoblastoma (Stratum A), participants may receive focal therapies only and chemotherapy will be held at the discretion of the treating team. If there is any evidence of progression or unsatisfactory results, the participant will begin chemotherapy as per Stratum A. For selected participants an effort will be made to perform sequential chemo-thermotherapy. In these cases, carboplatin will be administered one or two hours prior to thermotherapy.
Stratum B
Participants considered candidates for conservative management including those:
1. Participants with bilateral retinoblastoma who have R-E IV-V and IC D in one eye
2. Participants with advanced unilateral (unifocal or multifocal) retinoblastoma (R-E IV-V and IC D-E) who demonstrate foveal sparing by the tumor during EUA. Due to foveal sparing, these patients have potential for vision preservation.
Interventions (see Detailed Description): vincristine, topotecan, carboplatin, etoposide, filgrastim or PEG-filgrastim and focal therapy, including cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermo-therapy, plaque radiotherapy.
vincristine
Given via minibag/gravity flow.
topotecan
Given IV over 30 minutes.
filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
PEG-filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until ANC is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
carboplatin
Given IV over 60 minutes. Given periocular (subtenon/subconjunctival).
focal therapy
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team to strata A, B and D. In select cases of very early stage retinoblastoma (Stratum A), participants may receive focal therapies only and chemotherapy will be held at the discretion of the treating team. If there is any evidence of progression or unsatisfactory results, the participant will begin chemotherapy as per Stratum A. For selected participants an effort will be made to perform sequential chemo-thermotherapy. In these cases, carboplatin will be administered one or two hours prior to thermotherapy.
etoposide
Given IV. Participants who cannot tolerate etoposide may be given etoposide phosphate (Etopophos(R)).
Stratum C
Participants with advanced (R-E IV-V and IC D-E) unilateral retinoblastoma who require upfront enucleation. Participants will be assessed and treated by low, intermediate or high risk.
Interventions (see Detailed Description): vincristine, cyclophosphamide, MESNA, doxorubicin, etoposide, carboplatin, filgrastim or PEG-filgrastim, enucleation
vincristine
Given via minibag/gravity flow.
filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
PEG-filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until ANC is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
carboplatin
Given IV over 60 minutes. Given periocular (subtenon/subconjunctival).
etoposide
Given IV. Participants who cannot tolerate etoposide may be given etoposide phosphate (Etopophos(R)).
cyclophosphamide
Given IV.
MESNA
Given IV before CYCLO and at 3, 6 and 9 hours after CYCLO.
doxorubicin
Given IV on Day 1 of Cycles 2, 4 and 6 in Stratum C high-risk.
enucleation
Eye removal due to advanced disease in Strata C and D participants.
Stratum D
Participants with bilateral retinoblastoma who may require upfront enucleation for one eye due to advanced disease (R-E IV-V and IC E).
Interventions (see Detailed Description): vincristine, carboplatin, topotecan, etoposide, enucleation, filgrastim or PEG-filgrastim, focal therapy, including cryotherapy, laser photocoagulation, thermotherapy (and thermo-chemotherapy) and episcleral plaque brachytherapy, and external beam radiation or proton beam radiation in select cases.
vincristine
Given via minibag/gravity flow.
topotecan
Given IV over 30 minutes.
filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
PEG-filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until ANC is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
carboplatin
Given IV over 60 minutes. Given periocular (subtenon/subconjunctival).
focal therapy
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team to strata A, B and D. In select cases of very early stage retinoblastoma (Stratum A), participants may receive focal therapies only and chemotherapy will be held at the discretion of the treating team. If there is any evidence of progression or unsatisfactory results, the participant will begin chemotherapy as per Stratum A. For selected participants an effort will be made to perform sequential chemo-thermotherapy. In these cases, carboplatin will be administered one or two hours prior to thermotherapy.
etoposide
Given IV. Participants who cannot tolerate etoposide may be given etoposide phosphate (Etopophos(R)).
enucleation
Eye removal due to advanced disease in Strata C and D participants.
external beam radiation or proton beam radiation
EBRT or proton beam radiation will be administered to any eye in which the disease is considered to be not controllable with focal treatments alone, and in participants with enucleated eyes in which high risk of orbital and/or central nervous system disease is documented histologically (high-risk group with disease extension beyond the sclera or cornea, or beyond the cut end of the optic nerve). EBRT will be administered using standard techniques practices with the objective of limiting dose to normal tissues including the hypothalamic-pituitary unit, supratentorial brain, orbit, cochleae and contralateral eye when indicated. Participants will be evaluated on an individual basis to determine whether they might benefit from referral for proton therapy.
Interventions
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vincristine
Given via minibag/gravity flow.
topotecan
Given IV over 30 minutes.
filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until absolute neutrophil count (ANC) is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
PEG-filgrastim
Given subcutaneously 24-36 hours after chemotherapy for 7-10 days, until ANC is \>2,000/µL on one occasion after the expected nadir.
carboplatin
Given IV over 60 minutes. Given periocular (subtenon/subconjunctival).
focal therapy
Focal treatments will be administered at the discretion of the treating team to strata A, B and D. In select cases of very early stage retinoblastoma (Stratum A), participants may receive focal therapies only and chemotherapy will be held at the discretion of the treating team. If there is any evidence of progression or unsatisfactory results, the participant will begin chemotherapy as per Stratum A. For selected participants an effort will be made to perform sequential chemo-thermotherapy. In these cases, carboplatin will be administered one or two hours prior to thermotherapy.
etoposide
Given IV. Participants who cannot tolerate etoposide may be given etoposide phosphate (Etopophos(R)).
cyclophosphamide
Given IV.
MESNA
Given IV before CYCLO and at 3, 6 and 9 hours after CYCLO.
doxorubicin
Given IV on Day 1 of Cycles 2, 4 and 6 in Stratum C high-risk.
enucleation
Eye removal due to advanced disease in Strata C and D participants.
external beam radiation or proton beam radiation
EBRT or proton beam radiation will be administered to any eye in which the disease is considered to be not controllable with focal treatments alone, and in participants with enucleated eyes in which high risk of orbital and/or central nervous system disease is documented histologically (high-risk group with disease extension beyond the sclera or cornea, or beyond the cut end of the optic nerve). EBRT will be administered using standard techniques practices with the objective of limiting dose to normal tissues including the hypothalamic-pituitary unit, supratentorial brain, orbit, cochleae and contralateral eye when indicated. Participants will be evaluated on an individual basis to determine whether they might benefit from referral for proton therapy.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* ECOG Performance Score must be ≤ 2 within two weeks prior to registration.
* Participants must have an adequate liver function, as defined by bilirubin ≤ to 3X upper limit of normal (ULN), and SGOT and SGPT ≤ to 3X ULN.
* Participants must have adequate renal function as defined by serum creatinine ≤ to 3X ULN for age.
* Legal guardians must sign an informed consent indicating that they are aware of this study, the possible benefits, and toxic side effects. Legal guardians will be given a signed copy of the consent form.
Exclusion Criteria
* Presence of metastatic disease or gross (residual) orbital involvement
* Participants must not have an invasive infection at time of protocol entry.
* Inability or unwillingness of research participant or legal guardian/representative to give written informed consent.
ALL
No
Sponsors
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St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Locations
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St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Countries
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Related Links
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St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Clinical Trials Open at St. Jude
Other Identifiers
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NCI-2013-00409
Identifier Type: REGISTRY
Identifier Source: secondary_id
SJRET6
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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