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Recruiting Phase 2 NCT03919461

NCT03919461 Colorectal Metastasis Prevention International Trial 2

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Clinical Trial Summary
NCT ID NCT03919461
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Sponsor Assaf-Harofeh Medical Center
Condition Colorectal Neoplasms
Study Type INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment 200 participants
Start Date 2019-02-28
Primary Completion 2027-02-28

Trial Parameters

Condition Colorectal Neoplasms
Sponsor Assaf-Harofeh Medical Center
Study Type INTERVENTIONAL
Phase Phase 2
Enrollment 200
Sex ALL
Min Age 20 Years
Max Age 80 Years
Start Date 2019-02-28
Completion 2027-02-28
Interventions
Propranolol and etodolacPlacebo

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Brief Summary

The short perioperative period (days to weeks around surgery) is characterized by stress-inflammatory responses, including catecholamines (CAs, e.g., adrenaline) and prostaglandins (PGs, e.g., prostaglandin-E2) release, and induce deleterious pro-metastatic effects. Animal studies implicated excess perioperative release of CAs and PGs in facilitating cancer progression by affecting the malignant tissue, its local environment, and anti-metastatic immune functions. Congruently, animal studies conducted by the investigators indicate that combined use of the beta-adrenergic blocker, propranolol, and the prostaglandins inhibitor, etodolac - but neither drug separately - efficiently prevented post-operative metastatic development. Two recently conducted clinical trials, conducted by the investigators, in three medical centers in Israel, recruiting breast (n=38) and colorectal (n=34) cancer patients, assessing the safety and short-term efficacy of perioperative propranolol and etodolac treatment. Drugs were well tolerated, without severe adverse events. Importantly, molecular/biological analyses of the excised primary tumor indicated that drug treatment caused promising anti-metastatic transformations, as well as improvements in immune and inflammatory indices. These included (i) decreased tumor cell capacity to migrate, (ii) reduced pro-metastatic capacity of the malignant tissue, and (iii) improvement in immune infiltrating into the tumor (Paper published in Clinical Cancer Research, 2017). Herein, the investigators propose to conduct a double-blind placebo-controlled two-arm Phase II clinical trial in 200 colorectal cancer patients undergoing curative surgery in Israel. A perioperative 20-day drug treatment will be initiated 5 days before surgery. Primary outcomes will include (i) 3-year disease-free-survival (DFS), and 5-year overall survival (OS); and (ii) biological markers in blood samples, and in the excised tumor tissue. Secondary outcomes will include safety indices and psychological measures of depression, anxiety, distress, and fatigue

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria: 1\. Patients planned for surgery for primary resection of colon or rectal cancer with curative intent. 2. Single colonic or rectal carcinoma, proven by full colonoscopy and tumor biopsy. 3. No evidence of metastatic disease prior to surgery. Minimal workup would include abdominal CT with IV contrast (or CT+liver US) and chest XR. 4. ASA score of 1-3 or ECOG Performance Status of 0 to 1 5. Signed informed consent form 6. Willing and able to comply with study procedures (physically and mentally) 7. Men and women from age 20 to age 80 \- Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patients with metastatic disease, known prior to surgery 2. Patients in whom surgical resection is planned without curative intent 3. Patients with renal failure, measured by creatinine level \>1.5 4. Patients with significant heart failure (NYHA functional class 3 or higher) 5. Patients with significant liver failure (known cirrhosis, Bilirubin level\>2) 6. Patients currently suffering from asthma or Chronic Obs

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