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Palliative radiotherapy in addition to self-expanding metal stent for improving dysphagia and survival in advanced oesophageal cancer (ROCS: Radiotherapy after Oesophageal Cancer Stenting): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Palliative radiotherapy in addition to self-expanding metal stent for improving dysphagia and survival in advanced oesophageal cancer (ROCS: Radiotherapy after Oesophageal Cancer Stenting): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Palliative radiotherapy in addition to self-expanding metal stent for improving dysphagia and survival in advanced oesophageal cancer (ROCS: Radiotherapy after Oesophageal Cancer Stenting): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Background: the single most distressing symptom for patients with advanced esophageal cancer is dysphagia. Amongst the more effective treatments for relief of dysphagia is insertion of a self-expanding metal stent (SEMS). It is possible that the addition of a palliative dose of external beam radiotherapy may prolong the relief of dysphagia and provide additional survival benefit. The ROCS trial will assess the effect of adding palliative radiotherapy after esophageal stent insertion.

Methods/design: the study is a randomized multicenter phase III trial, with an internal pilot phase, comparing stent alone versus stent plus palliative radiotherapy in patients with incurable esophageal cancer. Eligible participants are those with advanced esophageal cancer who are in need of stent insertion for primary management of dysphagia. Radiotherapy will be administered as 20 Gray (Gy) in five fractions over one week or 30 Gy in 10 fractions over two weeks, within four weeks of stent insertion. The internal pilot will assess rates and methods of recruitment; pre-agreed criteria will determine progression to the main trial. In total, 496 patients will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio with follow up until death. The primary outcome is time to progression of patient-reported dysphagia. Secondary outcomes include survival, toxicity, health resource utilization, and quality of life. An embedded qualitative study will explore the feasibility of patient recruitment by examining patients' motivations for involvement and their experiences of consent and recruitment, including reasons for not consenting. It will also explore patients' experiences of each trial arm.

Discussion: The ROCS study will be a challenging trial studying palliation in patients with a poor prognosis. The internal pilot design will optimize methods for recruitment and data collection to ensure that the main trial is completed on time. As a pragmatic trial, study strengths include collection of all follow-up data in the usual place of care, and a focus on patient-reported, rather than disease-orientated, outcomes. Exploration of patient experience and health economic analyses will be integral to the assessment of benefit for patients and the NHS.

Trial registration: The trial was registered with Current Controlled Trials (registration number: ISRCTN12376468) on 10 July 2012.

Clinical Protocols, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Deglutition, Deglutition Disorders, Disease Progression, Dose Fractionation, Esophageal Neoplasms, Health Care Costs, Humans, Metals, Palliative Care, Patient Selection, Pilot Projects, Prosthesis Design, Quality of Life, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Research Design, Sample Size, Stents, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom, Clinical Trial, Phase III, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1745-6215
Adamson, Douglas
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Blazeby, Jane
689d490e-fca3-4430-88de-f19ec6cebf58
Nelson, Annmarie
9be17968-fda0-4bd8-94cd-96d772f5083c
Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Nixon, Lisette
e99b2dce-91a5-4267-940b-92ae83f8a9aa
Fitzgibbon, Jim
2fea06df-ef50-4f5f-bf03-f774d6179943
Crosby, Tom
d641cb6d-efc6-45ae-b083-a21c599a032c
Staffurth, John
51734078-ea1f-4188-8d32-75f786921586
Evans, Mim
f7b253b7-fe6c-4f16-89c5-65f4d6c106db
Kelly, Noreen Hopewell
7bbd263f-1560-4bf9-88ab-3b7a010f0072
Cohen, David
ada227d5-129b-4db3-8a0d-0f72aa6b473b
Griffiths, Gareth
7fd300c0-d279-4ff6-842d-aa1f2b9b864d
Byrne, Anthony
5cdb4375-c883-429a-b304-89f99fe2a7ab
et al.
Adamson, Douglas
d405637d-a330-4c0b-b7fa-317dc7c4c479
Blazeby, Jane
689d490e-fca3-4430-88de-f19ec6cebf58
Nelson, Annmarie
9be17968-fda0-4bd8-94cd-96d772f5083c
Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Nixon, Lisette
e99b2dce-91a5-4267-940b-92ae83f8a9aa
Fitzgibbon, Jim
2fea06df-ef50-4f5f-bf03-f774d6179943
Crosby, Tom
d641cb6d-efc6-45ae-b083-a21c599a032c
Staffurth, John
51734078-ea1f-4188-8d32-75f786921586
Evans, Mim
f7b253b7-fe6c-4f16-89c5-65f4d6c106db
Kelly, Noreen Hopewell
7bbd263f-1560-4bf9-88ab-3b7a010f0072
Cohen, David
ada227d5-129b-4db3-8a0d-0f72aa6b473b
Griffiths, Gareth
7fd300c0-d279-4ff6-842d-aa1f2b9b864d
Byrne, Anthony
5cdb4375-c883-429a-b304-89f99fe2a7ab

et al. (2014) Palliative radiotherapy in addition to self-expanding metal stent for improving dysphagia and survival in advanced oesophageal cancer (ROCS: Radiotherapy after Oesophageal Cancer Stenting): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials, 15, [402]. (doi:10.1186/1745-6215-15-402).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the single most distressing symptom for patients with advanced esophageal cancer is dysphagia. Amongst the more effective treatments for relief of dysphagia is insertion of a self-expanding metal stent (SEMS). It is possible that the addition of a palliative dose of external beam radiotherapy may prolong the relief of dysphagia and provide additional survival benefit. The ROCS trial will assess the effect of adding palliative radiotherapy after esophageal stent insertion.

Methods/design: the study is a randomized multicenter phase III trial, with an internal pilot phase, comparing stent alone versus stent plus palliative radiotherapy in patients with incurable esophageal cancer. Eligible participants are those with advanced esophageal cancer who are in need of stent insertion for primary management of dysphagia. Radiotherapy will be administered as 20 Gray (Gy) in five fractions over one week or 30 Gy in 10 fractions over two weeks, within four weeks of stent insertion. The internal pilot will assess rates and methods of recruitment; pre-agreed criteria will determine progression to the main trial. In total, 496 patients will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio with follow up until death. The primary outcome is time to progression of patient-reported dysphagia. Secondary outcomes include survival, toxicity, health resource utilization, and quality of life. An embedded qualitative study will explore the feasibility of patient recruitment by examining patients' motivations for involvement and their experiences of consent and recruitment, including reasons for not consenting. It will also explore patients' experiences of each trial arm.

Discussion: The ROCS study will be a challenging trial studying palliation in patients with a poor prognosis. The internal pilot design will optimize methods for recruitment and data collection to ensure that the main trial is completed on time. As a pragmatic trial, study strengths include collection of all follow-up data in the usual place of care, and a focus on patient-reported, rather than disease-orientated, outcomes. Exploration of patient experience and health economic analyses will be integral to the assessment of benefit for patients and the NHS.

Trial registration: The trial was registered with Current Controlled Trials (registration number: ISRCTN12376468) on 10 July 2012.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 October 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2014
Keywords: Clinical Protocols, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Deglutition, Deglutition Disorders, Disease Progression, Dose Fractionation, Esophageal Neoplasms, Health Care Costs, Humans, Metals, Palliative Care, Patient Selection, Pilot Projects, Prosthesis Design, Quality of Life, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Research Design, Sample Size, Stents, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom, Clinical Trial, Phase III, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Organisations: Clinical Trials Unit

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 406315
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406315
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 0da143a7-f79d-4a78-99cc-90337430e284
ORCID for Chris Hurt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1206-8355
ORCID for Gareth Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9579-8021

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:44
Last modified: 23 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Douglas Adamson
Author: Jane Blazeby
Author: Annmarie Nelson
Author: Chris Hurt ORCID iD
Author: Lisette Nixon
Author: Jim Fitzgibbon
Author: Tom Crosby
Author: John Staffurth
Author: Mim Evans
Author: Noreen Hopewell Kelly
Author: David Cohen
Author: Anthony Byrne
Corporate Author: et al.

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