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Brief Title: Hypofractionated Radiotherapy for Small Cell Lung Cancer
Official Title: Phase I Dose Escalation Trial of Hypofractionated Limited-field External Beam Thoracic Radiotherapy for Limited Stage Small Cell Carcinoma of the Lung
Study ID: NCT00469222
Brief Summary: Current treatments for limited stage small cell lung cancer have poor cure rates. The addition of chest radiation to chemotherapy improves cure rates, but these cancers still come back in the chest 30-50% of the time. Two factors which can improve control and cure rates for this cancer are increasing the chest radiation dose and minimizing the overall time it takes to complete radiation treatments. One method to achieve both of these goals is to give more radiation each day. This study is meant to study how tolerable and effective it would be to increase the intensity of chest radiation for small cell lung cancer patients by increasing the daily radiation dose. We aim to find the highest dose of chest radiotherapy that can be safely given with chemotherapy using this strategy. Patients in this trial will be monitored before, during and after their radiation and chemotherapy treatments for treatment side-effects, how effective treatments are at controlling their cancer and quality of life changes. Results from this trial will help to define more effective radiotherapy doses which are tolerable for this type of lung cancer and the quality of life changes patients experience when they undergo these treatments.
Detailed Description: Local control and overall survival rates associated with the standard chemotherapy and radiotherapy given for limited stage small cell lung cancer are poor and emerging evidence from several studies suggests that intensifying the radiotherapy dose given may further improve patient outcomes, but at the cost of increased radiotherapy side effects. This proposal aims to study a novel method of intensifying chest radiotherapy dose via increasing the daily radiotherapy dose which is directed at regions of visible disease only. This strategy allows for delivery of increased radiation doses without prolonging overall treatment time and allowing potential regrowth of cancer cells. We aim to determine the maximum radiation dose which can be safely given with chemotherapy for limited stage small cell lung cancer and study the effects this type of radiation regimen with chemotherapy has on patient side effects and quality of life. Results from this trial will contribute to the development of the ideal radiotherapy regimen for limited stage small cell lung cancer. Our results will add to the literature studying the effects dose-intense radiation strategies for lung cancer have on patient quality of life.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Name: Don Yee, MD
Affiliation: AHS Cancer Control Alberta
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR