Abstract

BackgroundThe single most distressing symptom for patients with advanced esophageal cancer is dysphagia. Amongst the more effective treatments for relief of dysphagia is insertion of a self-expanding metal stent (SEMS). It is possible that the addition of a palliative dose of external beam radiotherapy may prolong the relief of dysphagia and provide additional survival benefit. The ROCS trial will assess the effect of adding palliative radiotherapy after esophageal stent insertion.Methods/DesignThe study is a randomized multicenter phase III trial, with an internal pilot phase, comparing stent alone versus stent plus palliative radiotherapy in patients with incurable esophageal cancer. Eligible participants are those with advanced esophageal cancer who are in need of stent insertion for primary management of dysphagia. Radiotherapy will be administered as 20 Gray (Gy) in five fractions over one week or 30 Gy in 10 fractions over two weeks, within four weeks of stent insertion. The internal pilot will assess rates and methods of recruitment; pre-agreed criteria will determine progression to the main trial. In total, 496 patients will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio with follow up until death. The primary outcome is time to progression of patient-reported dysphagia. Secondary outcomes include survival, toxicity, health resource utilization, and quality of life. An embedded qualitative study will explore the feasibility of patient recruitment by examining patients’ motivations for involvement and their experiences of consent and recruitment, including reasons for not consenting. It will also explore patients’ experiences of each trial arm.DiscussionThe ROCS study will be a challenging trial studying palliation in patients with a poor prognosis. The internal pilot design will optimize methods for recruitment and data collection to ensure that the main trial is completed on time. As a pragmatic trial, study strengths include collection of all follow-up data in the usual place of care, and a focus on patient-reported, rather than disease-orientated, outcomes. Exploration of patient experience and health economic analyses will be integral to the assessment of benefit for patients and the NHS.Trial registrationThe trial was registered with Current Controlled Trials (registration number: ISRCTN12376468) on 10 July 2012.

Highlights

  • The single most distressing symptom for patients with advanced esophageal cancer is dysphagia

  • Given the sporadic and consistently limited availability of brachytherapy in the United Kingdom, the overarching aim of this study is to address uncertainties in the current evidence base by assessing whether the addition of external beam radiotherapy prolongs improvement in dysphagia, improves quality of life (QoL), and reduces health economic and personal burden in patients undergoing stent placement

  • Methods/Design This will be a pragmatic, randomized controlled trial, with an internal pilot phase, of external beam radiotherapy in addition to stent versus stent alone in patients clinically assessed as requiring stent insertion for the relief of dysphagia caused by esophageal cancer (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The single most distressing symptom for patients with advanced esophageal cancer is dysphagia. Esophageal cancer resulted in 7,606 deaths in the United Kingdom in 2008, reflecting a 70% increase in male agestandardized mortality rates compared to 1971. The emphasis of treatment for the majority of patients is on effective palliative interventions, with 70 to 90% requiring intervention for dysphagia [4,5]. This single symptom has profound impact on social and physical functioning and other aspects of quality of life (QoL). Interventions to improve swallowing must aim to produce prompt and lasting palliation of dysphagia whilst minimizing the need for late re-interventions and hospitalization Interventions must produce these benefits without causing significant impairment of other aspects of QoL

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