Abstract

BackgroundAmong patients with non-metastatic pancreatic cancer, 80% have high-risk, borderline resectable or locally advanced cancer, with a 5-year overall survival of 12%. MASTERPLAN evaluates the safety and activity of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) in addition to chemotherapy in these patients.Methods and designMASTERPLAN is a multi-centre randomised phase II trial of 120 patients with histologically confirmed potentially operable pancreatic cancer (POPC) or inoperable pancreatic cancer (IPC). POPC includes patients with borderline resectable or high-risk tumours; IPC is defined as locally advanced or medically inoperable pancreatic cancer. Randomisation is 2:1 to chemotherapy + SBRT (investigational arm) or chemotherapy alone (control arm) by minimisation and stratified by patient cohort (POPC v IPC), planned induction chemotherapy and institution. Chemotherapy can have been commenced ≤28 days prior to randomisation. Both arms receive 6 × 2 weekly cycles of modified FOLFIRINOX (oxaliplatin (85 mg/m2 IV), irinotecan (150 mg/m2), 5-fluorouracil (2400 mg/m2 CIV), leucovorin (50 mg IV bolus)) plus SBRT in the investigational arm. Gemcitabine+nab-paclitaxel is permitted for patients unsuitable for mFOLFIRINOX. SBRT is 40Gy in five fractions with planning quality assurance to occur in real time. Following initial chemotherapy ± SBRT, resectability will be evaluated. For resected patients, adjuvant chemotherapy is six cycles of mFOLFIRINOX. Where gemcitabine+nab-paclitaxel was used initially, the adjuvant treatment is 12 weeks of gemcitabine and capecitabine or mFOLFIRINOX. Unresectable or medically inoperable patients with stable/responding disease will continue with a further six cycles of mFOLFIRINOX or three cycles of gemcitabine+nab-paclitaxel, whatever was used initially. The primary endpoint is 12-month locoregional control. Secondary endpoints are safety, surgical morbidity and mortality, radiological response rates, progression-free survival, pathological response rates, surgical resection rates, R0 resection rate, quality of life, deterioration-free survival and overall survival. Tertiary/correlative objectives are radiological measures of nutrition and sarcopenia, and serial tissue, blood and microbiome samples to be assessed for associations between clinical endpoints and potential predictive/prognostic biomarkers. Interim analysis will review rates of locoregional recurrence, distant failure and death after 40 patients complete 12 months follow-up. Fifteen Australian and New Zealand sites will recruit over a 4-year period, with minimum follow-up period of 12 months.DiscussionMASTERPLAN evaluates SBRT in both resectable and unresectable patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.Trial registrationAustralia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12619000409178, 13/03/2019.Protocol version: 2.0, 19 May 2019

Highlights

  • Among patients with non-metastatic pancreatic cancer, 80% have high-risk, borderline resectable or locally advanced cancer, with a 5-year overall survival of 12%

  • In this publication we describe an investigator initiated multi-centre phase II trial conducted by the Australasian Gastrointestinal Trial Group (AGITG) in collaboration with Tasman Radiation Oncology Group (TROG) and the NHMRC CTC which was developed in collaboration by these groups through a series of clinical and academic meetings and workshops in Australia

  • Results for Alliance A021501 were presented in early 2021 [36] and are yet to be fully published. It was reported neoadjuvant mFOLFIRINOX for patients with borderline resectable pancreatic cancer was associated with favourable overall survival (OS) relative to historical data

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Summary

Introduction

Among patients with non-metastatic pancreatic cancer, 80% have high-risk, borderline resectable or locally advanced cancer, with a 5-year overall survival of 12%. Despite improvements in activity of adjuvant chemotherapy regimens, over 70% of resected patients will succumb [4]. The majority of patients without metastatic disease present with locoregionally advanced disease that can be classified as high-risk, borderline resectable (BRPC) or locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC). For these patients the 5-year overall survival is only 12% [3]. Improved treatment paradigms in these patients with nonmetastatic pancreatic cancer are desperately needed [5]

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