SUCCOR-Surgery in Cervical Cancer Comparing Different Surgical Aproaches in Stage IB1 Cervical Cancer

NCT ID: NCT03958305

Last Updated: 2019-05-29

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Total Enrollment

1000 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-05-16

Study Completion Date

2019-12-15

Brief Summary

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SUCCOR study tries to understand the outcomes of European patients with stage IB1 cervical cancer (FIGO 2009)1, that underwent a radical hysterectomy for cervical cancer in 2013-2014 within the ESGO area (European Society of Gynecologic Oncology)

Detailed Description

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SUCCOR study tries to understand the outcomes of European patients with stage IB1 cervical cancer (FIGO 2009) (1), that underwent a radical hysterectomy for cervical cancer in 2013-2014 within the ESGO area.

1.-Pecorelli, S. Revised FIGO staging for carcinoma of the vulva, cervix, and endometrium. Int J Gynaecol Obstet 105, 103-104 (2009).

Investigators want to know if the different surgical approaches may influence patients' survival (DFI and OS). A recent randomized phase III clinical trial, the LACC trial, conducted by Dr. Pedro Ramirez, was recently published in the NEJM.https://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1806395

The LACC trial ran at 33 centers in 12 countries, including six US centers. The study, randomized women during 2008-2017 who had stage 1A1, 1A2, or 1B1 cervical cancer to either MIS or open surgery for a radical hysterectomy. The study's primary endpoint was disease-free survival at 4.5 years. The results favored significantly open surgery.

Just after this report, the results from a second study by Dr. Jose Alejandro Rauh-Hain, that used observational data from the US National Cancer Database found significantly worse overall survival following minimally invasive radical hysterectomy for early-stage cervical cancer, compared with laparotomy.

Also, Dr. Daniel Jacob Margul et al. presented during the last ASCO meeting their results from the Premier Health Database and the US National Cancer Database showing among women with \>2 cm stage IB1 cervical cancer that MIS was associated with significantly decreased survival.

Likewise, these two studies have been as well published together along with the LACC trial in the same issue of NEJM.

In a recent survey conducted by the investigators and supported by ESGO, many of respondents showed the determination of collaborating in this observational project.

In Europe, it has not been recently not carried out any relevant large study comparing the different forms of surgical treatment of early cervical cancer.

The design of a randomized clinical trial in the coming years on this subject will face severe difficulties to convince ethics committees after the results of the last clinical trial.

Therefore, in the meantime, investigators consider it crucial to carry out a highly controlled European retrospective study that allows drawing satisfactory conclusions to make rational decisions on the treatment of early cervical cancer.

Investigators have selected a thorough list of inclusion and exclusion criteria along with a precise questionnaire trying to avoid confounding variables.

As you will realize, we will only include patients stage IB1(\<4 cm, FIGO 2009), with preoperative MRI and with some requirements on the pathological report. For instance, patients that underwent conization are excluded.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

1. Only centers belonging to the ESGO area can participate in the study
2. To accept the participation in the study as principal investigator (PI) of your institution (only one PI by each institution), the participant has to fill the application form included in the following link https://forms.gle/2WPhzrkxyFPodmDq5
3. As soon a center joins the study, the local PI will receive a Center Identification code and e-mail with instructions, allowing the data collection.
4. PI the will be allowed starting to collect data of consecutive cervical cancer patients operated in 2013 and 2014 in your center that meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria. (Appendix 2).
5. For collecting data, the online questionnaire can be reached in the following link: https://forms.gle/H1hCqXoC7G2EdWc79
6. Every time submit each a complete form, you will receive an e-mail with the confirmation and a copy of your response. For sending the form, you have to fill at least the required items. You are allowed to re-edit your answers later.
7. Investigators want to complete the data collection in less than six months.
8. The principal investigator will be available for any doubt by e-mail ([email protected]), or also by phone (+34630232947)
9. Besides, all the support documents will be sent to participants

PUBLICATIONS

The results of this study will be submitted for evaluation to international meetings and publication in a relevant international journal.

Authorship will include investigators following strict criteria, considering the introduced number of cases in the study by each investigator.

Furthermore, to count with as many authors as possible, researchers will create a Succor Research Study Group that will offer authorship when the investigators cannot allocate among the first authors

At the time of the publication, we will follow the STROBE guidelines for observational studies. (2) STROBE stands for an international, collaborative initiative of epidemiologists, methodologists, statisticians, researchers and journal editors involved in the conduct and dissemination of observational studies, with the common aim of STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology.

(2) von Elm E, Altman DG, Egger M, Pocock SJ, Gøtzsche PC, Vandenbroucke JP; STROBE Initiative. The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE)statement: guidelines for reporting observational studies. J Clin Epidemiol. 2008 Apr;61(4):344-9.

SUMMARY

The primary goal of the study is to know the outcomes of European patients that underwent radical surgery for stage IB1 cervical cancer (Open vs. MIS) during years 2013 and 2014.

Conditions

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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

RETROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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LAPAROTOMY

Radical hysterectomy by laparotomy

RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Radical hysterectomy is an operation done to treat some cancers of the cervix. The surgeon takes out the uterus and the ligaments (tissue fibers) that hold it in place. The cervix and an inch or 2 of the vagina around the cervix are also removed.

MINIMALLY INVASIVE SURGERY

Radical hysterectomy by minimally invasive surgery (Laparoscopy or Robotics)

RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Radical hysterectomy is an operation done to treat some cancers of the cervix. The surgeon takes out the uterus and the ligaments (tissue fibers) that hold it in place. The cervix and an inch or 2 of the vagina around the cervix are also removed.

Interventions

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RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY

Radical hysterectomy is an operation done to treat some cancers of the cervix. The surgeon takes out the uterus and the ligaments (tissue fibers) that hold it in place. The cervix and an inch or 2 of the vagina around the cervix are also removed.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Primary squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, or adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix
* Stage IB1 carcinoma, \<4 CMS, (FIGO 2009)
* Preoperative pelvic MRI indicating tumor diameter \< 4 cm (at least two dimensions,) and no parametrial invasion. Exceptionally it can be considered acceptable Vaginal Ultrasound, only if your Institution have internally validated this technique for cervical cancer. Otherwise it cannot be accepted.
* Preoperative either (Abdominal) CT scan or MRI or PET-CT ruling out extracervical metastatic disease
* Performance status ECOG 0-1
* Age 18 years or older
* Radical hysterectomy Type II-III or Type B-C by MIS (laparoscopic or robotic) or open surgery.
* Patient was operated during the years 2013-2014 within the ESGO area.
* Bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy (+- sentinel LN biopsy)
* Pathologic report shows information on tumor size, vaginal and parametrial margins and nodal status

Exclusion Criteria

* No past medical history of any invasive tumor
* No previous abdominal or pelvic radiotherapy of any type (including braquitherapy).
* No history of preoperative neoadjuvant chemotherapy .
* No cervical conization previous to surgery
* No suspicious positive pelvic or paraaortic nodes or metastatic disease on PET CT, MRI, or CT.
* There is none uterine diameter larger than 12cm
* No Conversion from MIS to laparotomy
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Clinica Universidad de Navarra, Universidad de Navarra

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Luis M Chiva, MD, PhD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Clinica Universidad de Navarra

Luis M Chiva, MD, PhD

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Clinica Universidad de Navarra

Daniel Vazquez, MD, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Clinica Universidad de Navarra

Jose A Minguez

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Clinica Universidad de Navarra

Locations

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Clinica Universidad de Navarra

Pamplona, , Spain

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Spain

Central Contacts

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Luis M Chiva, MD, PhD

Role: CONTACT

+34630232947

Daniel Vazquez, MD, PhD

Role: CONTACT

649357901

Facility Contacts

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Enrique Chiva, MD

Role: primary

References

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Ramirez PT, Frumovitz M, Pareja R, Lopez A, Vieira M, Ribeiro R, Buda A, Yan X, Shuzhong Y, Chetty N, Isla D, Tamura M, Zhu T, Robledo KP, Gebski V, Asher R, Behan V, Nicklin JL, Coleman RL, Obermair A. Minimally Invasive versus Abdominal Radical Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer. N Engl J Med. 2018 Nov 15;379(20):1895-1904. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1806395. Epub 2018 Oct 31.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 30380365 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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SUCCOR

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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