Gemcitabine With Abraxane and Other Investigational Therapies in Neoadjuvant Treatment of Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma



Status:Active, not recruiting
Conditions:Cancer, Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer
Therapuetic Areas:Oncology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 90
Updated:3/2/2019
Start Date:October 2011
End Date:June 2019

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GAIN-1 Study: Gemcitabine With Abraxane and Other Investigational Therapies in Neoadjuvant Treatment of Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma

This study will evaluate the role of Gemcitabine and Abraxane in the treatment of resectable
and borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer by giving the chemotherapy before surgery.

This current study proposes to conduct a prospective non-randomized open-label phase II trial
using Gemcitabine and Abraxane in the neoadjuvant treatment of resectable and
borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer. For patients that are low-risk resectable (based on
prediction rule) the plan is to administer 2 cycles of Gemcitabine and Abraxane followed by
additional systemic therapy or chemotherapy with radiation therapy (chemoRT), followed by
surgical resection. For patients who are either borderline-resectable or high-risk resectable
(see schema), the plan is to administer 2 cycles of Gemcitabine and Abraxane followed by
chemoradiotherapy concurrent with gemcitabine followed by surgical resection. For those
without high-risk features, systemic chemotherapy alone will be administered. The primary
endpoints will be R0 surgical resection rate, biochemical (CA 19-9), pathologic and
radiologic response rates. Secondary endpoints will include progression-free survival (PFS),
overall survival (OS), 30-day post-op mortality, toxicity, quality of life, pain control, and
correlative molecular exploratory analysis involving pancreatic tumor and stromal SPARC
expression levels. The investigators will also assess the patient, tumor, and clinical
characteristics that may predict R0 resectability, thus further refining the predictive rule
in high-risk patients as defined by Bao and colleagues. The investigators' hypothesis is that
by using targeted and risk-adapted chemotherapy or chemoRT, improved R0 surgical resections
can be achieved and effective systemic therapy delivered, which will translate to a
significant improvement in overall survival in patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma,
compared to published historical controls.

Inclusion Criteria:

- • Histologically or cytologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.

- Patients must have locally advanced pancreatic cancer, classified as either
low-risk resectable (LR), high-risk resectable (HR) or borderline resectable (BR)

- Age between 18 and 90 years at the time of consent.

- Patients with biliary obstruction must have adequate drainage prior to starting
treatment.

- Patients must have ≤ Grade I peripheral neuropathy (CTCAE v 4.0)

- Patients must have ≤ ECOG Performance status 2

- Pretreatment laboratory parameters:

- Absolute granulocyte/neutrophil count (AGC/ANC) ≥ 1.8 thou/mm3

- Platelet count ≥ 100,000/mm3

- Bilirubin < 2 mg/dl

- ALT/SGPT < 10x upper limit of normal

- Creatinine < 3 mg/dl

- Calculated creatinine clearance (via Cockcroft-Gault) > 30 mL/min

- Baseline CA 19-9 levels

- Signed study specific, IRB stamped informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

- • Evidence of any distant metastasis including peritoneal seeding and/or malignant
ascites

- Previous irradiation to the abdomen that would compromise the ability to deliver
the prescribed treatment

- Prior treatment for pancreatic cancer

- Active, untreated infection

- Surgical resection of the tumor (not including biopsies)

- Other malignancy (except non-melanoma skin cancer) that has not been disease-free
for at least 5 years.

- Pregnant and/or breast-feeding women, or patients (men and women) of
child-producing potential not willing to use medically acceptable contraception
while on treatment and for at least 3 months thereafter.

- Use of anti-epileptics (drugs such as phenytoin, phenobarbitol and carbamazepine)

- ECG abnormality with the following: QTC >500, left bundle branch block or any
other clinically significant finding that would interfere with protocol therapy.

- History of any other disease, metabolic dysfunction, physical examination
finding, or clinical laboratory finding giving reasonable suspicion of a disease
or condition that contraindicates the use of protocol therapy or that might
affect the interpretation of the results of the study or that puts the subject at
high risk for treatment complications, in the opinion of the treating physician
We found this trial at
1
site
1376 Mowry Road
Gainesville, Florida 32610
(352) 273-8010
University of Florida Shands Cancer Center We are the University of Florida Health Cancer Center
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mi
from
Gainesville, FL
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