1. Repeat resection in recurrent glioblastoma (3rGBM) Trial: A randomized care trial
- Author
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Jean Raymond, Michael B. Keough, Tejas Sankar, Kelvin Young, Georges L’Espérance, Miguel Chagnon, Jacob C. Easaw, Greg N. Bowden, Yan Yuan, Guylaine Gevry, Faith G. Davis, Karolyn Au, Félix Scholtes, Mukt Patel, Tim E. Darsaut, and Vivek Mehta
- Subjects
Adult ,Protocol (science) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,Palliative care ,Brain Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Recurrent glioblastoma ,General surgery ,MEDLINE ,law.invention ,Clinical trial ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Prospective Studies ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Glioblastoma ,business - Abstract
Background: The prognosis for patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM) is dismal, and the question of repeat surgery at time of recurrence is common. Re-operation in the management of these patients remains controversial, as there is no randomized evidence of benefit. An all-inclusive pragmatic care trial is needed to evaluate the role of repeat resection. Methods: 3rGBM is a multicenter, pragmatic, prospective, parallel-group randomized care trial, with 1:1 allocation to repeat resection or standard care with no repeat resection. To test the hypothesis that repeat resection can improve overall survival by at least 3 months (from 6 to 9 months), 250 adult patients with prior resection of pathology-proven glioblastoma for whom the attending surgeon believes repeat resection may improve quality survival will be enrolled. A surrogate measure of quality of life, the number of days outside of hospital/nursing/palliative care facility, will also be compared. Centers are invited to participate without financial compensation and without contracts. Clinicians may apply to local authorities to approve an investigator-led in-house trial, using a common protocol, web-based randomization platform, and simple standardized case report forms. Discussion: The 3rGBM trial is a modern transparent care research framework with no additional risks, tests, or visits other than what patients would encounter in normal care. The burden of proof remains on repeat surgical management of recurrent GBM, because this management has yet to be shown beneficial. The trial is designed to help patients and surgeons manage the uncertainty regarding optimal care. Clinical Trial Registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT04838782.
- Published
- 2022
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