Title

Chemotherapy, Radiation Therapy, and Surgery in Treating Patients With Locally Advanced Cancer of the Vulva
A Phase II Trial of Radiation Therapy and Weekly Cisplatin Chemotherapy for the Treatment of Locally-Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Vulva
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Intervention/Treatment

    cisplatin ...
  • Study Participants

    61
This phase II trial is studying how well giving radiation therapy together with cisplatin followed by surgery works in treating patients with locally advanced cancer of the vulva. Drugs used in chemotherapy such as cisplatin use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to damage tumor cells. Giving chemotherapy with radiation therapy before surgery may shrink the tumor so it can be removed during surgery.
OBJECTIVES:

I. Determine the efficacy of radiotherapy and cisplatin, in terms of achieving a complete clinical and pathological response, in patients with locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva that is not amenable to standard radical vulvectomy.

II. Determine the toxicity of this regimen followed by surgery in these patients.

OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study.

Patients undergo radiotherapy daily on days 1-5 and receive concurrent cisplatin IV over 30 minutes on day 1. Treatment repeats weekly for approximately 6.5 weeks (a total of 32 fractions of radiotherapy) in the absence of unacceptable toxicity.

Six to eight weeks after the completion of chemoradiotherapy, patients with a complete clinical response may undergo incisional biopsy of the primary tumor and bilateral inguinal/femoral nodes (if the groin nodes were initially unresectable). Patients with microscopic or gross resectable residual disease may then undergo radical resection of the residual tumor. Patients with unresectable disease after the completion of chemoradiotherapy receive additional radiotherapy with 1-2 courses of concurrent cisplatin.

Patients are followed every 3 months for 2 years, every 6 months for 3 years, and then annually thereafter.
Study Started
Jan 31
2005
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2010
Study Completion
Jan 20
2012
Results Posted
Oct 17
2017
Last Update
Nov 20
2017

Radiation 3-Dimensional Conformal Radiation Therapy

  • Other names: 3-dimensional radiation therapy, 3D CONFORMAL RADIATION THERAPY, 3D CRT, 3D-CRT, Conformal Therapy, Radiation Conformal Therapy

Drug Cisplatin

Given IV

  • Other names: Abiplatin, Blastolem, Briplatin, CDDP, Cis-diammine-dichloroplatinum, Cis-diamminedichloridoplatinum, Cis-diamminedichloro Platinum (II), Cis-diamminedichloroplatinum, Cis-dichloroammine Platinum (II), Cis-platinous Diamine Dichloride, Cis-platinum, Cis-platinum II, Cis-platinum II Diamine Dichloride, Cismaplat, Cisplatina, Cisplatinum, Cisplatyl, Citoplatino, Citosin, Cysplatyna, DDP, Lederplatin, Metaplatin, Neoplatin, Peyrone's Chloride, Peyrone's Salt, Placis, Plastistil, Platamine, Platiblastin, Platiblastin-S, Platinex, Platinol, Platinol- AQ, Platinol-AQ, Platinol-AQ VHA Plus, Platinoxan, Platinum, Platinum Diamminodichloride, Platiran, Platistin, Platosin

Procedure Conventional Surgery

Treatment (conventional surgery, radiation therapy, cisplatin) Experimental

Patients undergo radiotherapy daily on days 1-5 and receive concurrent cisplatin IV over 30 minutes on day 1. Treatment repeats weekly for approximately 6.5 weeks (a total of 32 fractions of radiotherapy) in the absence of unacceptable toxicity. Six to eight weeks after the completion of chemoradiotherapy, patients with a complete clinical response may undergo incisional biopsy of the primary tumor and bilateral inguinal/femoral nodes (if the groin nodes were initially unresectable). Patients with microscopic or gross resectable residual disease may then undergo radical resection of the residual tumor. Patients with unresectable disease after the completion of chemoradiotherapy receive additional radiotherapy with 1-2 courses of concurrent cisplatin.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Diagnosis of locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva

T3 or T4 (N0-3, M0)
Not amenable to surgical resection by standard radical vulvectomy
Previously untreated disease
No recurrent disease
No vulvar melanoma or sarcoma
Performance status - GOG 0-3
Absolute neutrophil count at least 1,500/mm^3
Platelet count at least 100,000/mm^3
Bilirubin no greater than 1.5 times normal
Alkaline phosphatase no greater than 3 times normal
SGOT no greater than 3 times normal
Creatinine no greater than 2.0 mg/dL
No gastrointestinal bleeding
No severe gastrointestinal symptoms
Capable of tolerating a radical course of chemoradiotherapy
No septicemia
No severe infection
No other invasive malignancy within the past 5 years except nonmelanoma skin cancer
No circumstance that would preclude study completion or follow-up
No prior cytotoxic chemotherapy
No prior pelvic radiotherapy
No concurrent boost brachytherapy
No prior anticancer therapy that would contraindicate study therapy

Summary

Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery

Complete Clinical and Pathologic Response

Complete clinical and pathologic response is defined as the disappearance of all gross tumor during chemoradiation with no residual tumor present in the surgical specimen.

Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery

50.0
Percentage of Participants
90% Confidence Interval: 39.0 to 61.0

Treatment-Related Adverse Effects (Grade 3 or Higher) During Study Treatment Period

Number of participants with a maximum grade of 3 or higher during the treatment period. Adverse events are graded and categorized using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events Version 2.0

Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery

Anemia

Cardiovascular

Constitutional

Dermatologic

Gastrointestinal

Genitourinary/Renal

hemorrhage

Infection

Leukopenia

Metabolic

Neutropenia

Other Hematologic

Other Neurologic

Pain

Pulmonary

Sexual/reproductive

Thrombocytopenia

Age, Customized

Race (NIH/OMB)

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery

Drop/Withdrawal Reasons

Cisplatin + Radiation, Then Surgery