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Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy for the comprehensive treatment of 1-3 Oligometastatic tumors (SABR-COMET-3): Study protocol for a randomized phase III trial

  • Robert Olson*
  • , Lindsay Mathews
  • , Mitchell Liu
  • , Devin Schellenberg
  • , Benjamin Mou
  • , Tanya Berrang
  • , Stephen Harrow
  • , Rohann J.M. Correa
  • , Vasudeva Bhat
  • , Howard Pai
  • , Islam Mohamed
  • , Stacy Miller
  • , Famke Schneiders
  • , Joanna Laba
  • , Derek Wilke
  • , Sashendra Senthi
  • , Alexander V. Louie
  • , Anand Swaminath
  • , Anthony Chalmers
  • , Stewart Gaede
  • Andrew Warner, Tanja D. De Gruijl, Alison Allan, David A. Palma
*Corresponding author for this work
  • BC Cancer Centre for the North
  • Bc Cancer - Vancouver
  • BC Cancer- Surrey
  • Bc Cancer - Kelowna
  • BC Cancer - Victoria
  • Beatson Oncology Centre
  • Western University
  • Nova Scotia Cancer Centre
  • Alfred Health Radiation Oncology
  • University of Amsterdam
  • University of Glasgow

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Background: A recent randomized phase II trial evaluated stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) in a group of patients with a small burden of oligometastatic disease (mostly with 1-3 metastatic lesions), and found that SABR was associated with a significant improvement in progression-free survival and a trend to an overall survival benefit, supporting progression to phase III randomized trials. Methods: Two hundred and ninety-seven patients will be randomized in a 1:2 ratio between the control arm (consisting of standard of care [SOC] palliative-intent treatments), and the SABR arm (consisting of SOC treatment + SABR to all sites of known disease). Randomization will be stratified by two factors: histology (prostate, breast, or renal vs. all others), and disease-free interval (defined as time from diagnosis of primary tumor until first detection of the metastases being treated on this trial; divided as ≤2 vs. > 2 years). The primary endpoint is overall survival, and secondary endpoints include progression-free survival, cost effectiveness, time to development of new metastatic lesions, quality of life (QoL), and toxicity. Translational endpoints include assessment of circulating tumor cells, cell-free DNA, and tumor tissue as prognostic and predictive markers, including assessment of immunological predictors of response and long-term survival. Discussion: This study will provide an assessment of the impact of SABR on survival, QoL, and cost effectiveness to determine if long-term survival can be achieved for selected patients with 1-3 oligometastatic lesions. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03862911. Date of registration: March 5, 2019,

Original languageEnglish
Article number380
JournalBMC cancer
Volume20
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 May 2020

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Cancer
  • Oligometastases
  • Quality of life
  • Stereotactic radiotherapy
  • Survival

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