Nutritional Support During Induction Therapy for Esophageal Cancer
NCT ID: NCT05314946
Last Updated: 2024-04-03
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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RECRUITING
NA
26 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-11-01
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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A strategy is to place a feeding tube directly in the stomach or in the small bowel to have an access to the patient's gastrointestinal tract during administration of chemo radiation therapy. However, these feeding tubes may lead to adverse events, including dislodgement, infection, the tube may be plugged, etc. If these complications were to happen, patients may have their treatment delayed, may have to come to the emergency department or even be admitted. In some cases, patients may need to have a surgery performed to treat the complication. Most centres in Canada have moved away from placement of these feeding tubes due to the high incidence of complications associated with the feeding tubes placement, and due to the high efficacy from the chemoradiation therapy in shrinking the tumour, allowing for the patient to swallow.
In London, the preference from the Medical and Radiation Oncologists was to have these feeding tubes placed to avoid delay in treating the patients. There is therefore significant controversy as to what is the best approach in this patient population. Our goal is to run a feasibility randomized controlled trial studying this question.
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Detailed Description
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Esophageal cancer is the malignancy associated with the highest risk for malnutrition. Before their diagnosis, 80% of all patients with esophageal cancer have over 10-15% unintentional weight loss. Strategies to palliate malnutrition in cancer patients and its consequences on outcomes have been developed. In patient with severe nutritional risk, use of nutritional support for at least 10-14 days has been recommended in a non-surgical, oncology population. The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism have recommended preoperatively enteral nutrition for 5-7 days in cancer patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. In addition, dietary counselling and oral nutritional supplement were suggested to prevent weight loss and interruption of radiotherapy on patients undergoing radiation treatments for head/neck or gastrointestinal malignancies. Routine enteral nutrition was not suggested during chemotherapy-only treatments.
The type of supplements administered may have an impact on recovery. It was shown that esophageal cancer patients receiving enriched glutamine, fibers and oligosaccharide perioperative enteral supplementation had a shorter systemic inflammatory response syndrome postoperatively and less surgical stress, which could in turn lead to reduced postoperative immunosuppressive conditions. A recent retrospective study from Taiwan did show a slightly improved 4-year overall survival rate and less mucositis on patients supported by enteral feeding tubes with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and undergoing neoadjuvant therapy.
However, there is still equipoise in the literature and most centers in Canada have moved away from feeding tubes. At LHSC, feeding tubes were historically placed on every patient during their induction treatment. Efforts are being made to spare patients from unnecessary procedure, but patient selection is variable. Standardization of this practice is needed. A recent retrospective study evaluating the effect of surgical enteral access prior to induction treatment did not show nutritional or perioperative benefit. There was no difference in postoperative complication rates and weight loss was similar. In fact, dysphagia is felt to be significantly relieved after a single cycle of chemotherapy. Percutaneous feeding tubes may not be required on all patients during induction therapy for esophageal cancer.
Those feeding tubes are associated with high morbidity. Kidane et al have shown that 39.3% of visits to the ED after an esophagectomy are due to feeding tubes problems (dislodgement, blockage, infection). Of those ED visits for feeding tubes issues, 17% resulted to an admission. Small bowel obstruction is also associated to percutaneous feeding tube placement and selective use has been recommended. Perioperative use of feeding jejunostomy in gastroesophageal cancer has been associate with a complication rate as high as 44%. Given the related-morbidity, guidelines now recommend selective use of feeding tubes on high-risk patients after esophagectomy. When patients undergoing chemotherapy present to the emergency department with fever or infectious signs, data from the Ontario Cancer Registry show that 46% are admitted, increasing healthcare burden. At baseline, patients undergoing chemotherapy are at high risk of presenting to the emergency department or having unplanned visit to the cancer center, this figure going as high as 49% within 4 weeks of initiation of chemotherapy in comparable jurisdictions. Efforts must be made to save an already strained system.
According to the 2020 Surgical Quality Indicator Report Summary from OH-CCO, our center has the worst 30-day unplanned ED visit rate (45%, provincial mean 27%) after esophagectomy in the province of Ontario. Anecdotally, it is felt that most of those cases are related to feeding tubes complications. If these patients present to the ED due to feeding tubes concerns after an esophagectomy, it is likely they would have presented during induction treatment if they had a tube.
Alternative to feeding tubes exist (home IV hydration) which could become a less invasive and more interesting solution.
The objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of a larger randomized controlled trial evaluating unplanned visit to the ED or the outpatient clinic in patients eligible for trimodality for esophageal cancer during their induction treatment, randomized into receiving percutaneous enteral access for nutritional support versus not.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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Percutaneous enteral access
Feeding tube, either gastrostomy (G-) tube or gastrojejunostomy (GJ-) tube (placed by Interventional Radiology) or J-tube (surgically placed)
Placement of a percutaneous feeding tube
The standard arm will have a feeding tube placed (G-tube or GJ-tube by IR; or surgically placed J-tube)
No percutaneous enteral access
No feeding tube placed.
No feeding tube placed
The experimental arm will forego placement of a feeding tube.
Interventions
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No feeding tube placed
The experimental arm will forego placement of a feeding tube.
Placement of a percutaneous feeding tube
The standard arm will have a feeding tube placed (G-tube or GJ-tube by IR; or surgically placed J-tube)
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Non-cervical biopsy-proven esophageal or gastroesophageal junction (Siewert I or II) cancer
* Patient eligible for induction therapy then esophagectomy (stage Ib to III)
Exclusion Criteria
* metastatic disease
* early-stage disease with either upfront esophagectomy or endoscopic resection planned
* patient refusal of the feeding tube
* inability to swallow their pill
* inability to tolerate a full fluid diet
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Mehdi Qiabi
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Mehdi Qiabi
Associate Scientist
Locations
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London Health Sciences Centre - Victoria Hospital
London, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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HSREB #120816
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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