Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Obstructive Colon cancER First Treated by cOlostomy

NCT ID: NCT06107920

Last Updated: 2026-02-10

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

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE3

Total Enrollment

232 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-05-07

Study Completion Date

2031-08-31

Brief Summary

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The aim of this study is to determine whether chemotherapy prior to tumor removal (neoadjuvant chemotherapy), in patients undergoing treatment for colon cancer in occlusion (CCO), would improve the rate of patients able to benefit from "optimal" treatment, i.e. complete treatment (including all neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy cures).

This new strategy, which would combine chemotherapy before surgery and possibly post-operatively (depending on tumor analysis), could improve the prognosis of occluded colon cancers by treating circulating micrometastases and/or inducing a reduction in tumor size, thereby increasing the rate of complete resection.

Detailed Description

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In France, for patients admitted for an obstructive colon cancer, surgery is the preferred strategy. Primary diverting stoma is associated with low morbidity, and low 30-day mortality. Primary diverting stoma is not a major surgical undertaken, is effective to relief bowel obstruction, enables optimization of the patient's condition, allows adequate oncological staging and secondary elective colectomy. This strategy is actually recommended by the French and European Guidelines in patients with left-sided obstructive colon cancer and may be an option in patients with right-sided obstructive colon cancer, especially in those at high risk of postoperative complications

Urgent surgery for obstructive colon cancer is associated with increased risk of postoperative morbidity, mortality and permanent stoma rates as it is generally performed in elderly patients with poor medical condition or in patients with severe comorbidities. Moreover, obstructive colon cancers are diagnosed at locally advanced (T4) or metastatic stage and, at equal tumour stage, obstruction itself negatively impacts oncological outcomes in colon cancer patients. Among the several factors that may explain poor oncological outcomes of OCC, the absence of adjuvant chemotherapy may play an important role.

Adjuvant chemotherapy is the standard of care for patients undergoing curative resection for a stage III CC. For those with MSS high-risk stage II CC, adjuvant treatment is still a matter of debate. However, in the particular setting of MSS stage II obstructing CC, adjuvant chemotherapy may improve oncological outcomes. Because of high postoperative morbidity and patients' medical conditions, up to 37% of OCC patients for whom adjuvant systemic chemotherapy is considered appropriate do not receive this treatment. It is our hypothesis that the initiation of chemotherapy before resection of the primary tumour in a perioperative setting in patients with non-metastatic OLCC and for whom the obstruction has been relieved by a colostomy may allow to treat a higher proportion of patients with a full curative therapeutic sequence (including resection and chemotherapy if needed).

Randomized phase II-III trials have demonstrated the feasibility (tolerance, postoperative morbidity) and the efficacy (tumor downstaging, tumor downsizing, histological regression, higher R0 resection rate) of neoadjuvant FOLFOX or CAPOX chemotherapy in uncomplicated colon cancer with a trend towards an improvement of DFS. Data of these studies led the French Oncological Authorities to accept neoadjuvant chemotherapy in a perioperative setting as a therapeutic option in patients with locally advanced colon cancer (TNCD 21/01/2019, chapter 3, Cancer du colon non métastatique (p10): "Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy may be considered for locally advanced tumors deemed unresectable or at the limit of resectability (expert opinion)"; "it is possible to perform an upstream stoma before starting chemotherapy ("neo-adjuvant") and then a re-intervention aimed at exeresis (expert opinion). This treatment option should be discussed at the preoperative multidisciplinary consultation meeting if a T4 tumor is suspected during the preoperative workup."

The authors concluded that neoadjuvant chemotherapy using FOLFOX was feasible and might be a treatment option for patients with obstructive colon cancer for whom the obstruction has been relieved by a definctioning stoma. Further large-scale studies are warranted to confirm the present findings. This is exactly what COnCERTO trial aims to determine.

It is our hypothesis that the initiation of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in a perioperative setting in patients with non-metastatic MSS/pMMR Obstructive Colon Cancer (OCC) and for whom the obstruction has been relieved by a stoma may improve the compliance of the treatment and thus may allow to increase the rate of patients receiving the full curative therapeutic sequence according to the guidelines defined as following:

Resection of the primary tumor WITH:

* Low-risk stage II: NO CHEMOTHERAPY
* High-risk stage II: CHEMOTHERAPY AT INVESTIGATOR'S DISCRETION
* Stage III pT1-T3N1: CAPOX (3 months) or FOLFOX (6 months)
* Stage III pT4 and/or N2: FOLFOX (6 months) MSS High-risk stage II are defined as following: No microsatellite instability and presence of vascular emboli, perinervous or lymphatic invasion, poor differentiation, \<12 harvested lymph nodes, perforation).

In addition, once OCC are known to have poor prognosis compared to their non-complicated counterparts, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (before resection of the primary) may improve prognosis of these patients by treating circulating micrometastases or by inducing tumor down-staging and thus improving the R0 resection rate.

We thus designed a randomized phase III trial aiming to assess whether FOLFOX or CAPOX neoadjuvant chemotherapy in a perioperative setting may increase the rate of full curative therapeutic sequence in patients with MSS/pMMR OCC first treated by a defunctionning stoma (figure 5).

Demonstrating the positive impact on complicance to the full curative therapic strategy of perioperative chemotherapy in patients with OCC treated by defunctioning stoma, may change medical practices at a national and international level and may lead to a new standard of care. OCC is a major public health issue with no improvement in prognosis during the past decade. By improving the compliance of treatment of patients with OCC, the present study will ensure public health and economic benefits

Conditions

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Colon Cancer

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Arm I (Adjuvant chemotherapy) / Control arm

Diverting stoma - colectomy - +/- adjuvant chemotherapy

The colectomy (open or laparoscopic) should be performed within 1 to 20 days after the randomization and with respect of the oncological quality criteria of resection. After completion of surgery, adjuvant chemotherapy will be discussed as follow:

* Low-risk stage II: No adjuvant treatment
* High-risk MSS stage II (vascular emboli, lymphatic or perinervous invasion, poor differentiation, \<12 harvested lymph nodes, perforation): Investigator's discretion
* pT1-T3N1: CAPOX (3 months) or FOLFOX (6 months)
* pT4 and/or N2: FOLFOX (6 months)

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Arm II (Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy) / Experimental arm

Patients receive systemic CAPOX or FOLFOX chemotherapy (3 months) within 21 days after the randomization. After completion of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and within 3 to 5 weeks, the colectomy (open or laparoscopic) will be performed with respect of the oncological quality criteria. Adjuvant chemotherapy will be discussed as follow:

* Low-risk stage II: No adjuvant treatment
* High-risk MSS stage II (vascular emboli, perinervous or lymphatic invasion, poor differentiation, \<12 harvested lymph nodes, perforation): Investigator's discretion
* Stage III: CAPOX or FOLFOX (3 months)

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy

Intervention Type DRUG

Diverting stoma- neoadjuvant chemotherapy - colectomy - +/- adjuvant chemotherapy

Interventions

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Neoadjuvant chemotherapy

Diverting stoma- neoadjuvant chemotherapy - colectomy - +/- adjuvant chemotherapy

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Arm II

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Age ≥ 18 years
* ECOG performance status 0 or 1
* Patients with obstructive colon cancer treated by defunctioning stoma
* Pathologically confirmed adenocarcinoma (≥10 cm from the anal verge- left transverse colon) - MSS/pMMR (microsatellites stable primary tumor) status
* Patient requiring colectomy
* Laboratory data including : White blood cell count ≥ 3.109 /L with Neutrophils ≥ 1,5.109 / L, Platelet count ≥ 100.109 / L, Hemoglobin ≥ 9 g/dL (5,6 mmol/L), Total bilirubin ≤ 1,5 x ULN (upper limit of normal), ASAT and ALAT ≤ 2,5 x ULN, Alkaline phosphatase ≤ 1,5 x ULN, Serum creatinine ≤ 1,5 x ULN (performed 10-15 days prior to randomization).
* Non metastatic colon cancer (lung, liver, peritoneal) on thoracic-abdomino-pelvis CT scan
* Absence of synchronous colorectal cancer
* No prior chemotherapy or abdominal or pelvic irradiation
* No history of colorectal cancer
* No serious medical co-morbidity : uncontrolled inflammatory bowel disease, uncontrolled angina, recent \[within the past 6 months\] myocardial infarction, or another serious medical condition, judged to compromise ability to tolerate chemotherapy and/or surgery
* Women of childbearing potential with effective contraception will be required during chemotherapy treatment and for 6 months after cessation of chemotherapy treatment and a negative blood pregnancy test by beta-HCG at inclusion.
* Women surgically sterile (absence of ovaries and/or uterus)
* Postmenopausal women: confirmation diagnostic (non-medically induced amenorrhea for at least 12 months prior to the inclusion visit)
* For men participating in the study, contraception is required during the trial and for 6 months after stopping chemotherapy treatment.
* Patient able to comply with the study protocol, in the investigator's judgment
* Patient affiliated with, or beneficiary of a social security (national health insurance) category
* Person informed and having signed his consent

Exclusion Criteria

* Contraindication to colectomy and/or anesthesia
* Rectal cancer located within 10 cm of the anal verge by endoscopy or under the peritoneal reflection at surgery
* Patient having received radiation therapy prior to surgery
* Metastatic spread at baseline assessment (lung, liver, peritoneal)
* History or current evidence on physical examination of central nervous system disease or; Peripheral neuropathy ≥ grade 1
* Contraindication to study neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatments
* Presence of inflammatory bowel disease, HNPCC syndrome or polyposis Clinically relevant coronary artery disease or history of myocardial infarction in the last 6 months, or high risk of uncontrolled arrhythmia
* Uracilemia ≥ 150 ng/ml (suggestive of complete DPD deficiency)
* Medical, geographical, sociological, psychological or legal conditions that would not permit the patient to complete the study or sign informed consent
* Any significant disease, which, in the investigator's opinion, would exclude the patient from the study.
* Patient is a pregnant (positive blood pregnancy test) or breastfeeding (lactating) woman or intending to become pregnant during the study and for at least 6 months after the treatment termination
* Person deprived of liberty by administrative or judicial decision or placed under judicial protection (guardianship or supervision)
* Simultaneous participation in another interventional research
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Hospital, Rouen

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Chu Amiens

Amiens, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chr Beauvais

Beauvais, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chru Besancon

Besançon, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Avicenne

Bobigny, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

CHU CAEN

Caen, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Antoine Beclere

Clamart, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Colmar

Colmar, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Dijon

Dijon, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Grenoble

Grenoble, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Kremlin Bicetre

Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chru Lille

Lille, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chru Lille

Lille, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Limoges

Limoges, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphm La Timone

Marseille, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphm Hopital Nord

Marseille, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chru Nancy

Nancy, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Nantes

Nantes, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Saint Antoine

Paris, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Cochin

Paris, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Aphp Georges Pompidou

Paris, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Gh Diaconesses Croix St Simon

Paris, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

CHU LYON

Pierre-Bénite, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Ch Poissy

Poissy, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Rouen

Rouen, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Ch St Denis

Saint-Denis, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Strasbourg

Strasbourg, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Chu Tours

Tours, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Ch Versailles

Versailles, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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France

Central Contacts

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Valérie Bridoux

Role: CONTACT

0232881347 ext. +33

Julie Rondeaux, PhD

Role: CONTACT

0232885427

Facility Contacts

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Charles Sabbagh, Pr

Role: primary

03 22 08 88 93

Francesco Brunetti, Pr

Role: primary

01 49 81 24 03

Zaher Lakkis, Dr

Role: primary

03 81 68 11 66

Christophe Tresallet, Pr

Role: primary

01 48 95 71 00

Arnaud Alves, Pr

Role: primary

02 31 06 32 21

Hadrien Tranchart, Dr

Role: primary

01 45 37 40 37

Gilles Breysacher, Dr

Role: primary

03 89 12 51 23

Nathan Moreno-Lopez, Dr

Role: primary

03 80 29 37 47

Jean-Luc Faucheron, Pr

Role: primary

04 76 76 75 75

Antoine Brouquet, Pr

Role: primary

01 45 21 70 30

Philippe Zerbib, Pr

Role: primary

03 20 44 42 60

Guillaume Piessen, Pr

Role: primary

03 20 44 44 07

Muriel Mathonnet, Pr

Role: primary

05 55 05 65 23

Diane Mege, Dr

Role: primary

04 91 38 58 51

Laura Beyer-Berjot, Dr

Role: primary

04 91 96 88 25

Adeline Germain, Dr

Role: primary

03 83 15 31 21

Emilie Duchalais, Dr

Role: primary

02 76 64 37 98

Jeremie Lefevre, Pr

Role: primary

01 71 97 04 19

David Fuks, Pr

Role: primary

01 58 41 17 08

Mehdi Karoui, Pr

Role: primary

01 56 09 35 36

Olivier Dubreuil, Pr

Role: primary

01 44 74 28 39

Vahan Kepenekian, Dr

Role: primary

04 78 86 23 71

Elie Chouillard, Pr

Role: primary

01 39 27 51 65

Jean Jacques Tuech, Pr

Role: primary

02 32 88 85 72

Jean-Marc Catheline, Dr

Role: primary

01 42 35 61 40

Benoit Romain, Dr

Role: primary

03 88 12 72 75

Mehdi Ouaïssi, Pr

Role: primary

01 45 21 24 19

Martin Brunel, Dr

Role: primary

01 39 63 89 35

Other Identifiers

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2019/0407/HP

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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