Endometrial Cancer Conservative Treatment (E.C.Co). A Multicentre Archive

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • End date
    Apr 8, 2025
  • participants needed
    100
  • sponsor
    National Cancer Institute, Naples
Updated on 19 February 2024
cancer
estrogen
hysterectomy
conservative management
oophorectomy
progesterone
progestin
progesterone receptor
lymphadenectomy
laparoscopy
infertility
laparotomy
progestin therapy
endometrial cancer

Summary

Approximately one fourth of cases of endometrial cancer (EC) are diagnosed in premenopausal women, of whom approximately 40% wish to preserve their fertility. When arising in young women, EC usually presents with favorable prognostic features, as a focal, well differentiated endometrioid tumor, with minimal or absent myometrial invasion. This profile corresponds to the Type 1 EC, which correlates with the estrogen/progesterone receptor positive (ER+/PR+) pattern. On the other hand, these patients frequently present with clinical signs of a hyperestrogenism (chronic anovulation, infertility, obesity). Primary progestin therapy has been demonstrated to be effective in early well differentiated tumors and in poor operative candidates with response rates ranging from 58-100%.Currently, the therapeutic approach to an early stage EC consists of a staging laparotomy/laparoscopy, including a total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (TAH-BSO), peritoneal washings, and lymphadenectomy (pelvic and aortic), depending on the pathological risk profile pre- and intraoperatively determined. Therefore, the current standard of surgical approach is preclusive of fertility.

The worldwide experience and data on conservative management of EC are, however, still limited. Most of reports based on cases retrospectively collected, harboring potential methodological bias, using different treatments and drugs, and with insufficient follow-up.

Some systematic reviews have been published in the last decade, trying to summarize the literature data. Therapeutic results seem to be promising with a regression rate of approximately 75% and relapse occurring in 25-40% of cases, with anecdotical reports of deaths of disease (DOD). The fertility outcome was, however, not satisfying with about 30% pregnancy rate in patients attempting to conceive, and an overall low rate of assisted reproductive techniques (ART) despite the subfertile clinical profile.Therefore, there is a need for a prospective, multicentre cooperative project able to systematically collect data from consecutive patients treated according to defined (not necessarily identical) protocols, concerning the oncological, as well as, the obstetrical outcomes. Moreover, this project could represent the "template" in which a pretreatment fertility counseling, psychological support, and definitive surgery are routinely included according to shared criteria.

Description

PURPOSE The goal of this research project is to learn more about the safety of conservatively treating EC and about subsequent fertility outcome.

PROJECT TYPE Observational (patient archive) - The project runs within the framework of Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup (GCIG), thus, participating Centres must belong to one of the qualified National groups.

PROJECT DESIGN Observational model: Cohort

TIME PERSPECTIVE Prospective

ENDPOINT CLASSIFICATION Cancer (response, relapse) and fertility (pregnancy, delivery) outcomes

INTERVENTIONS Data collection

OUTCOME MEASURES Primary outcome measures

  • Proportion of complete regression
  • Duration of response
  • Frequency and pattern of relapse
  • Frequency of metachronous ovarian cancer
  • Tumor-related deaths

Secondary outcome measures

  • Treatment related morbidity
  • Frequency of spontaneous pregnancies
  • Frequency of pregnancies after ART
  • Pattern of residual disease on definitive surgical specimens

REQUIREMENTS FOR PATIENT REGISTRATION

  • Informed consent to personal data processing
  • Existence of an IRB-approved local protocol that allows conservative treatment to be performed or statement that such treatment is considered as a standard (please note that such protocols should be shared with the database owner National Cancer Institute of Naples).

TREATMENT Since this is a archive, treatment is not dictated by a protocol. However, treatment has to be administered according to a IRB-approved local protocol (except for the countries where conservative treatment can be given outside a IRB-approved study because considered as a standard procedure).

DURATION A first phase of three years is planned, eventually followed by further three years.

PUBLICATION POLICY Data generated are property of all investigators and will be object of publication after general agreement.

DATA TO BE COLLECTED

Patient enrollment and registration of data are made by appropriate eCRFs via the Clinical Trials Unit of National Cancer Institute of Naples (Study Data Center) website through the following steps:

  1. go to http://www.usc-intnapoli.net;
  2. select language;
  3. click "Ask for authorization" to create your personal account;
  4. fill and send the "authorization form";
  5. make a screenshot of the "authorization form" and send it to l.sparavigna@istitutotumori.na.it;
  6. enter into to the system using your credentials and click on "E.C.Co.";
  7. click "the join request form";
  8. wait for authorization (a verification message will be sent to your email address within 24-48 h);
  9. enter into to the system using your credentials and click on "E.C.Co." for patient registration and/or updating.

Details
Condition Endometrial Carcinoma, Uterine Cancer, Uterine Cancer
Age 18-45 years
Treatment data collection
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04290299
SponsorNational Cancer Institute, Naples
Last Modified on19 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

Informed consent to personal data processing
Existence of an IRB-approved local protocol that allows conservative treatment to be performed or statement that such treatment is considered as a standard (please note that such protocols should be shared with the database owner National Cancer Institute of Naples)
Clear my responses

How to participate?

Step 1 Connect with a study center
What happens next?
  • You can expect the study team to contact you via email or phone in the next few days.
  • Sign up as volunteer  to help accelerate the development of new treatments and to get notified about similar trials.

You are contacting

Investigator Avatar

Primary Contact

site

Additional screening procedures may be conducted by the study team before you can be confirmed eligible to participate.

Learn more

If you are confirmed eligible after full screening, you will be required to understand and sign the informed consent if you decide to enroll in the study. Once enrolled you may be asked to make scheduled visits over a period of time.

Learn more

Complete your scheduled study participation activities and then you are done. You may receive summary of study results if provided by the sponsor.

Learn more

Similar trials to consider

Loading...

Browse trials for

Not finding what you're looking for?

Every year hundreds of thousands of volunteers step forward to participate in research. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.

Sign up as volunteer

user name

Added by • 

 • 

Private

Reply by • Private
Loading...

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur, adipisicing elit. Ipsa vel nobis alias. Quae eveniet velit voluptate quo doloribus maxime et dicta in sequi, corporis quod. Ea, dolor eius? Dolore, vel!

  The passcode will expire in None.
Loading...

No annotations made yet

Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text from the left.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.
Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.