Title
Aprepitant in the Prevention of Cisplatin-induced Delayed Emesis
Aprepitant in the Prevention of Cisplatin-induced Delayed Emesis: a Double-blind Randomized Trial
Phase
Phase 3Lead Sponsor
S. Maria Hospital, TerniStudy Type
InterventionalStatus
TerminatedIndication/Condition
EmesisIntervention/Treatment
urea metoclopramide aprepitant ...Study Participants
303The aim of the study is to compare efficacy and tolerability of aprepitant plus dexamethasone versus metoclopramide plus dexamethasone in the prevention of cisplatin-induced delayed emesis in patients that received aprepitant, palonosetron and dexamethasone before chemotherapy administration for the prevention of acute emesis.
This is a phase III, double-blind, randomized trial, to evaluated the efficacy and safety of aprepitant for the prevention of delayed emesis in patients submitted for the first time to chemotherapy with cisplatin.
The study will be carried out during the first cycle of chemotherapy.
For the prevention of acute emesis, all patients will receive, before chemotherapy:
dexamethasone 12 mg iv, in 15 minutes, 30 minutes before chemotherapy
palonosetron 0.25 mg iv bolus, 30 minutes before chemotherapy
aprepitant 125 mg orally, 60 minutes before chemotherapy
After 24 hours from chemotherapy administration, patients will be randomized to receive one of the following antiemetic treatments:
A) dexamethasone 8 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy and at 8 pm on day 2, then at 8 am and 8 pm on days 3-4 plus Metoclopramide 20 mg orally 4 times a day: 24 hours after chemotherapy and then at 4 pm, 7 pm, 10 pm on day 2 then at 7 am, 12 am, 5 pm, 10 pm on days 3-4.
B) Dexamethasone 8 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy (day 2) and then at 8 am on days 3-4 plus Aprepitant 80 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy on day 2 and then at 8 am on day 3.
The patients will receive prochlorperazine suppositories as rescue medication, for important nausea and vomiting (> 2 episodes) during days 1-5 after chemotherapy.
The patients will receive a diary, which includes a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for nausea and vomiting evaluation. All patients will fill out the diary, in which, for 6 consecutive days (days 1-6), patients will report for each day the number of vomiting episodes, the intensity and duration of nausea, any antiemetic rescue medication and any adverse event and its treatment.
In addition, on day 1 before chemotherapy and then on day 6, patients have to fill out the FLIE (Functional Living Index-Emesis), a questionnaire concerning the impact of nausea and vomiting on their quality of life.
Primary end-point is the percentage of complete responses (no vomiting and no rescue treatment) on days 2-5 after cisplatin administration
Dexamethasone 8 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy (day 2) and then at 8 am on days 3-4 plus Aprepitant 80 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy on day 2 and then at 8 am on day 3.
dexamethasone 8 mg orally: 24 hours after chemotherapy and at 8 pm on day 2, then at 8 am and 8 pm on days 3-4 plus Metoclopramide 20 mg orally 4 times a day: 24 hours after chemotherapy and then at 4 pm, 7 pm, 10 pm on day 2 then at 7 am, 12 am, 5 pm, 10 pm on days 3-4.
Inclusion Criteria: patients receiving for the first time chemotherapy with cisplatin at doses ≥50 mg/m2. patients over 18 years old and those who signed informed consent adequate contraception if premenopausal women. Every other anticancer drug in the first 24 hours will be administered after the end of cisplatin. Exclusion Criteria: patients receiving other anticancer drugs on days 2-4, except 5-fluorouracil, VP16, VM26, vincristine, vinblastine, vindesine, vinorelbine, gemcitabine patients already submitted to chemotherapy with cisplatin patients with concomitant severe diseases, other than neoplasm, or with predisposition to emesis such as intestinal obstruction, active peptic ulcer, hypercalcemia and brain metastases contraindications to corticosteroids (i.e., active peptic ulcer or previous bleeding from peptic ulcer patients submitted to concomitant radiotherapy or submitted to radiotherapy in the 15 days before chemotherapy or planned to receive radiotherapy during the 8 days after chemotherapy patients receiving other concomitant antiemetic treatments or submitted to antiemetic treatments in the 24 hours before chemotherapy patients with nausea or vomiting in the 24 hours before chemotherapy patients receiving concomitant steroids, except when administered at physiologic dose patients receiving concomitant benzodiazepines, except when used for nocturnal sedation patients with WBC count <3000/mm3 or platelet count <70000/mm3 patients who are pregnant