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Pain REduction with bone metastases STereotactic radiotherapy (PREST): A phase III randomized multicentric trial

Authors :
Maria Antonietta Gambacorta
Vincenzo Valentini
Francesco Cellini
Alessio G. Morganti
Giambattista Siepe
C.M. Donati
Antonia Salatino
Vincenzo Fusco
V. Borzillo
Anna Santacaterina
Rossella Di Franco
Matteo Muto
Antonino D'Agostino
Francesco Pastore
Paolo Muto
Salvatore Parisi
Savino Cilla
Stefano Pergolizzi
Renzo Corvò
Stefania Manfrida
Giampaolo Montesi
Fabio Arcidiacono
Valeria Masiello
Francesco Deodato
Ernesto Maranzano
Mario Santarelli
Cellini F.
Manfrida S.
Deodato F.
Cilla S.
Maranzano E.
Pergolizzi S.
Arcidiacono F.
Di Franco R.
Pastore F.
Muto M.
Borzillo V.
Donati C.M.
Siepe G.
Parisi S.
Salatino A.
D'Agostino A.
Montesi G.
Santacaterina A.
Fusco V.
Santarelli M.
Gambacorta M.A.
Corvo R.
Morganti A.G.
Masiello V.
Muto P.
Valentini V.
Source :
Trials, Trials, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BioMed Central Ltd., 2019.

Abstract

Background Palliative antalgic treatments represent an issue for clinical management and a challenge for scientific research. Radiotherapy (RT) plays a central role. Techniques such as stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) were largely investigated in several phase 2 studies with good symptom response, becoming widely adopted. However, evidence from randomized, direct comparison of RT and SBRT is still lacking. Methods/design The PREST trial was designed as an interventional study without medicinal treatment. It is a phase 3, open-label, multicentric trial randomized 1:1. Inclusion criteria include painful spinal bone metastases presenting with a pain level > 4 (or > 1 if being treated with an analgesic) on the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS); expected intermediate/high prognosis (greater than 6 months) according to the Mizumoto prognostic score; low spine instability neoplastic score (SINS) sores ( Discussion The primary endpoint is overall pain reduction, defined in terms of variation between baseline and 3-month evaluation; pain will be measured using the NRS. Secondary endpoints include pain control duration; retreatment rates (after a minimum interval of 1 month); local control assessed with RECIST criteria; symptom progression free survival; progression-free survival; overall survival; and quality of life (at 0, 30, and 90 days). Accrual of 330 lesions is planned. The experimental arm is expected to have an improvement in overall pain response rates of 15% with respect to the standard arm (60% according to Chow et al. (Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 82(5):1730–7, 2012)). Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03597984. Registered on July 2018.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Trials, Trials, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2019)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1275ae01f9abab1a3c18a2c82557b023