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ChemoRadiotherapy after Induction

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Title: ChemoRadiotherapy after Induction


1
ChemoRadiotherapy after Induction ChemoTherapy
in Cancer of the Stomach CRITICS study A
multicenter randomized phase III trial of
neo-adjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery and
chemotherapy or by surgery and chemoradiotherapy
in resectable gastric cancer
2
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3
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

4
Epidemiology of Gastric Cancer
  • USA gt25.000 cases/year 16.000 deaths
  • The Netherlands gt2000 cases/yr 1000 deaths
  • 2nd cause of cancer death worldwide
  • 3rd cause (after lung and colorectal) of cancer
    death in Europe (138.000/yr)
  • Distal cancers decreasing tumors of cardia or
    esophago-gastric junction increasing
  • 65 T3-T4 85 N 30 liver metastases

5
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

6
Gastric Cancer SurgerySurvival US vs. Japanese
Centers
Maruyama et al., World J Surg 198711418-25
7
Sites of Failure after Curative Resection
Local Regional (total) 88 Distant
(only) 25 Local / Regional (only) 54
Adapted from Gunderson et al. 1981 Smalley et
al, IJROBP 2002
8
How extensive should surgery be?
  • Goal of gastric cancer treatment is a R0
    resection
  • D1 resection involved part of stomach lesser
    and greater omenta (incl. nodes along lesser and
    greater curvature)
  • D2 resection D1 plus transverse mesocolon,
    spleen, tail of pancreas and nodes along left
    gastric artery, common hepatic artery, celiac
    artery and splenic artery

9
Lymphatic drainage of the stomach
N1
N2
Hartgrink et al. JCO 2004
10
D1 vs D2 Updated results
Lancet 1995, N Eng J Med 1999, J Clin Oncol 2004
11
D1 vs D2 Survival
Lancet 1995, N Eng J Med 1999, J Clin Oncol 2004
12
D1 vs D2 Relapse Risk
Hartgrink et al. JCO 2004
13
D1 vs D2 Prognostic FactorsAge (n711)
Hartgrink et al. JCO 2004
14
Survival after splenec-/pancreatectomy Median FUP
11 years
15
D1 vs D2 Results without splenectomy
D1 D2 p-value Morbidity
() 23 35 0.001 Mortality () 3.8 6.3 NS
Survival mean (yrs) 5.77 6.67 0.018 5
year () 47 56 7 year () 42 52 11 year
() 33 47
Courtesy C.J.H. van de Velde
16
D1 vs D2 Lymph node dissection Survival
according to N-stage
17
Comparison Dutch and MRC trial
Bonenkamp JJ et al. Lancet 1995, Cushieri A
et al. Lancet 1996
18
Summary 1/3
  • Surgery is the primary curative treatment of
    gastric cancer
  • Total gastrectomy shows no survival benefit over
    partial gastrectomy (unless proximal
    location/diffuse subtype)
  • Following curative resection the incidence of
    locoregional recurrences is high

19
Summary 2/3
  • Extended lymph node dissection provides no
    survival advantage over D1 dissection
  • D2 lymph node dissection is associated with
    higher morbidity and mortality
  • Morbidity and mortality are greatly influenced by
    the extent of lymph node dissection,
    pancreatectomy/splenectomy, age, gender and
    experience/volume of surgical department
  • For N2 disease, an extended lymph node dissection
    may offer cure females may benefit from D2
    resection

20
Summary 3/3
  • AJCC and UICC recommend analysis of ?15 lymph
    nodes for accurate staging (18 of US patients
    have ?15 lymph nodes analyzed)

Hundahl, Cancer 2000
21
Conclusions Type of Surgery
  • The treatment of choice for resectable gastric
    cancer anno 2005 is D1 surgery
  • Subtotal gastrectomy without pancreatico-splenecto
    my
  • Dissection of ?15 lymph nodes (D1 plus) for
    accurate staging
  • Whether/which adjuvant therapy offers a benefit
    after adequate surgery should be tested in
    randomized trials with standardized surgery and
    pathology, optimal chemotherapy and
    state-of-the-art radiotherapy
  • New predictive tests should identify patients
    that would benefit from tailored adjuvant therapy

22
Adjuvant strategies in gastric cancer
  • postoperative chemotherapy
  • postoperative radiotherapy
  • postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • preoperative radiotherapy
  • preoperative chemotherapy
  • preoperative chemoradiotherapy

23
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

24
British Stomach Cancer Group Trial Adjuvant
radiotherapy / chemotherapy in resectable gastric
cancer
Hallissey et al, Lancet 1994
25
Adjuvant Chemotherapy vs SurgeryOdds ratios for
13 chemotherapy regimens (n2096)
Hermans et al, JCO 1993
26
Adjuvant chemotherapy for resectable gastric
cancer
  • 5 published meta-analyses (Hermans 1993, Earle
    1999, Mari 2000, Janunger 2002, Panzini 2002)
  • Combined data indicate a small, non- or
    borderline statistically significant survival
    benefit 3-5
  • No large phase III trials
  • Modern chemotherapeutic regimens are lacking

27
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

28
Preoperative Radiotherapy40 Gy surgery vs
surgery alone (n370)
5 yr OS 19.8 vs. 30.1 plt0.01
Zhang et al (IJROBP, 1998)
29
SWOG Intergroup 0116 Gastric Surgical Adjuvant
Trial
  • Inclusion criteria
  • stage Ib-IVM0
  • adenocarcinoma of stomach or gastro-esophageal
    junction
  • (macroscopic) complete resection of tumor
  • WHO ? 2
  • caloric intake gt 1500 kcal (oral or enterostomal)
  • Surgery D2 recommended 54 D0 resection
  • Randomization
  • surgery only (n275)
  • surgery chemoradiotherapy (n281)

30
SWOG Intergroup 0116 Trial Design
  • Chemotherapy
  • 5-FU(425 mg/m2)/LV (20 mg/m2) d1-5
  • Chemo-radiotherapy
  • d28 start
  • 45 Gy/25 fx
  • plus 5-FU (400 mg/m2) / LV (20 mg/m2)
  • first 4 days and last 3 days
  • Chemotherapy
  • 2 cycles 5-FU (425 mg/m2)/LV (20 mg/m2) 5d
  • 1 and 2 months after chemo-radiotherapy

31
SWOG Intergroup 0116 TrialRadiotherapy
  • Target volume consisted of tumor bed, regional
    nodes and 2 cm beyond proximal and distal margins
    of resection
  • Tumor bed based on pre-op CT, barium X-rays,
    surgical clips
  • Proximal T3 tumors left hemidiaphragm included
  • Perigastric, celiac, local para-aortic, splenic,
    hepatoduodenal and pancreatico-duodenal nodes
    were included
  • At least 2/3 of one kidney was spared

32
SWOG Intergroup 0116 TrialResults 1
Overall survival Relapse-free survival
p0.005
plt0.001
Median 27 vs. 36 19 vs. 30 (months) NEJM
26 vs. 35 19 vs. 30 (months) update 3-yr 41
vs. 50 31 vs. 48 ()
Mcdonald et al, NEJM 2001, ASCO GI 2004
33
SWOG Intergroup 0116 TrialResults 2
Mcdonald et al, NEJM 2001
34
SWOG Intergroup 0116 TrialConclusions
  • Only 10 underwent the advised D2 dissection
  • Randomization was after surgery
  • 34 had major radiation treatment plan deviation
  • According to present standard, chemotherapy was
    suboptimal and the interaction with radiation
    limited
  • 64 completed postoperative therapy
  • No data on late toxicity provided

35
Effect of postoperative chemoradiation
  • 54 D0 effect
  • 36 D1 effect
  • 10 D2 no effect

John S. Macdonald. World Congress on
Gastro-Intestinal Cancer, 16-19 June 2004,
Barcelona, Spain
36
Role of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy in D2-resected
gastric cancer patients
  • Observational study
  • n544 postoperative CRT (INT-0116) after
    curative D2 resection
  • n446 surgery only
  • Median duration of
  • OS 95.3 vs. 62.6 months (p0.02)
  • DFS 75.6 vs. 52.7 months (plt0.02)

37
Role of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy in D2-resected
gastric cancer patients
Kim et al.(IJROBP, 2005)
38
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

39
Protocol I N02RCA
  • Postoperative chemo-radiotherapy after surgical
    resection of gastric and esophageal cancer
  • A single institution phase I-II dose-finding
    study of a fixed radiotherapy regimen with
    dose-escalation of a chemotherapy regimen of
    cisplatin and capecitabine

40
Protocol II M02PCR
  • Postoperative chemo-radiotherapy after surgical
    resection of gastric and esophageal cancer
  • A multicenter phase I-II study of a fixed
    radiotherapy regimen with concurrent chemotherapy
    with escalating doses of capecitabine

41
Local Recurrence
Oppedijk et al ASTRO 2006
42
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

43
Magic Trial
44
Magic TrialDesign
  • Median FU survivors gt 3 yrs
  • 90 or gt 2 yrs FU

Cunningham ASCO 2005
45
Magic TrialPathologic staging following surgery
Cunningham NEJM 2006
46
Magic TrialOverall survival
Cunningham NEJM 2006
47
Magic TrialConclusions
  • Perioperative chemotherapy in resectable
    carcinoma of the stomach and distal esophagus
    results in
  • Tumor downsizing and downstaging
  • Increased PFS
  • Increased OS

48
Topics
  • Epidemiology
  • Surgery
  • Postoperative chemo or radiotherapy
  • Preoperative radiotherapy
  • Postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • NKI-AVL Phase I-II studies
  • Perioperative chemotherapy
  • CRITICS

49
REAL-2Design
  • UK NCRI cooperative group study
  • 63 centres mostly UK, 2 Australian

Epirubicin Cisplatin 5FU
Locally advanced or metastatic oesophago gastric
cancer (chemonaive)
Epirubicin Cisplatin Capecitabine
Epirubicin Oxaliplatin 5FU
Epirubicin Oxaliplatin Capecitabine
  • Stratified for
  • Centre
  • Locally advanced vs metastatic
  • PS 0/1 vs 2

Cunningham ASCO 2006
50
Fluoropyrimidine comparisionOverall survival
(per-protocol)
HR for ITT population 0.88 (0.77 1.00) p
0.058
51
Platinum comparisionOverall survival
(per-protocol)
HR for ITT population 0.91 (0.79-1.04) p0.159
52
REAL-2 Conclusions
  • The primary objective of the trial was met
  • Capecitabine is not inferior to 5-FU
  • Oxaliplatin is not inferior to Cisplatin
  • In these triplet regimens
  • Capecitabine could replace PVI 5-FU
  • Oxaliplatin could replace Cisplatin
  • The use of EOX is associated with improved
    efficacy over ECF

53
XP vs. FP in advanced gastric cancerDesign
Kang, ASCO 2006
54
XP vs. FP in advanced gastric cancerPrimary
endpoint met progression-free survival HR 0.81
Per protocol analysis
55
XP vs. FP in advanced gastric cancerSuperior
response rate with XP vs. FP
56
XP vs. FP in advanced gastric cancerConclusion
  • XP can be a new standard chemotherapy in AGC
  • Primary objective met (non-inferiority of XP vs.
    FP for PFS)
  • OS results support primary analysis
  • Independent review confirmed the results
  • XP curve clearly above FP
  • Response rate superior with XP vs. FP
  • Multivariate and subgroup analyses confirm
    results
  • Similar favorable safety of XP vs. FP
  • XP avoids inconvenience and complications
    associated with infusional 5-FU

57
CRITICS Protocol and Trial Logistics
  • Protocol
  • Participating hospitals
  • Local approval
  • Local initiation
  • Randomisation procedure
  • Case Report Forms
  • Tissue collection
  • Financial support

58
CRITICSDesign
Preoperative chemotherapy 3x ECC q 3 wks
3x ECC q 3 wks
D1 surgery
QoL
R
Preoperative chemotherapy 3x ECC q 3 wks
D1 surgery
Chemoradiation
Tissue banking
³
MAGIC(3xECC)
15
Lymph nodes
45 Gy/25
fx

no
splenectomy
capecitabine bid
Epirubicine
/
Cisplatin
/Capecitabine
cisplatin weekly
3D
-
CRT/IMRT
  • Stratified for
  • Centre
  • Histological type
  • Localisation of tumour

59
Chemotherapy (ECC)
  • Epirubicine 50 mg/m2 i.v. (3 weekly x3) on day 1
  • Cisplatin 60 mg/m2 i.v. (3 weekly x3) on day 1
  • Capecitabine 1000 mg/m2 orally bid on day 1-14
    (3 weekly x3)

Chemotherapy (CRT)
  • Cisplatin 20 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1 (weekly x5)
  • Capecitabine 575 mg/m2 bid orally on each day
    of RT

60
CRITICSDesign
Preoperative chemotherapy 3x ECC q 3 wks
3x ECC q 3 wks
D1 surgery
QoL
R
Preoperative chemotherapy 3x ECC q 3 wks
D1 surgery
Chemoradiation
Tissue banking
³
MAGIC(3xECC)
15
Lymph nodes
45 Gy/25
fx

no
splenectomy
capecitabine bid
Epirubicine
/
Cisplatin
/Capecitabine
cisplatin weekly
3D
-
CRT/IMRT
  • Stratified for
  • Centre
  • Histological type
  • Localisation of tumour

61
CRITICS Radiotherapy
  • Clinical Target Volume (CTV) is based on
  • type of surgery (partial or total gastrectomy)
  • anastomosis and stumps
  • gastric remnant
  • regional lymph nodes

62
CRITICS Anastomosis and stumpsRoux-en-Y
oesphagojejunal anastomosis
63
CRITICS Anastomosis and stumpsRoux-en-Y
oesphagojejunal anastomosis
  • Duodenal stump has to be treated in tumors of the
    distal stomach
  • For tumors of the proximal stomach or
    GE-junction, the oesophagojejunal anastomosis has
    to be treated
  • Cave for GE-junction tumors a margin of 4cm (!)
    of oesophagus (paraoesophageal nodes) has to be
    included in the CTV

64
CRITICS Gastric remnant and tumor bed
  • GE and proximal tumors at least medial
    hemidiaphragm
  • T1-2 tumors tumor bed not necessarily
  • Hepatogastric ligament (i.e. part of lesser
    omentum between liver and lesser curvature, which
    contains peri-gastric nodes)
  • Anterior abdominal wall (?) (only T3-4 tumors)

HGL
65
CRITICS Regional lymph nodesJapanese
classification
  • right cardial nodes
  • left cardial nodes
  • nodes along the lesser curvature
  • nodes along the greater curvature
  • suprapyloric nodes
  • infrapyloric nodes
  • nodes along the left gastric artery
  • nodes along the common hepatic artery
  • nodes around the celiac axis
  • nodes at the splenic hilus
  • nodes along the splenic artery
  • nodes in the hepatoduodenale ligament
  • nodes at the posterior aspect of the pancreas
    head
  • nodes at the root of the mesenterium
  • nodes in the mesocolon of the transverse colon
  • para-aortic nodes

66
CRITICS Regional lymph nodesWhich lymph nodes
have to be included in the CTV?
67
CRITICS Regional lymph nodesWhich lymph nodes
have to be included in the CTV?
  • pN0 after adequate (gt15 lnn) D1/D2 dissection ??
  • Individualize for GE, cardia, fundus and antrum
    tumors
  • GE-junction paraoesophageal, perigastric,
    hepatogastro lig, celiac stations 1-67-911-12
  • Cardia/proximal 1/3 perigastric, celiac, splenic
    hilum, supra-pancreatic (if extensive nodal
    involvement also porta hepatis,
    pancreaticoduodenal and paraoesophageal)
    stations 3-11
  • Body/middle 1/3 perigastric, celiac, splenic
    hilum, supra-pancreatic, porta hepatis,
    pancreaticoduodenal stations 1-13
  • Antrum/distal 1/3 perigastric,
    pancreaticoduodenal, porta hepatis, celiac,
    suprapancreatic (if extensive nodal involvement
    also splenic hilum) stations 3-912-13
  • all combinations

68
CRITICS Pathology
  • Diagnostic protocol
  • According to NVVP guidelines
  • Correlation of histopathological characteristics
    with clinical data
  • Biobanking
  • Correlation of molecular characteristics with
    clinical data

69
CRITICS Macroscopy
  • Description of specimen
  • Partial or complete gastrectomy
  • Other organs present
  • Length greater curvature
  • Length lesser curvature
  • Size of omentum major / minus
  • Open specimen along greater curvature

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CRITICS Macroscopy
  • Tumor
  • Localisation
  • Aspect
  • Size
  • Surgical margins
  • Depth of invasion
  • Serosa at site of tumor
  • Mucosa

74
Intestinal Type (1)
75
Intestinal Type (2)
76
Intestinal Type (3)
77
Diffuse Type (1)
78
Diffuse Type (2)
79
Diffuse Type (3)
80
CRITICS Macroscopy
  • Lymph nodes
  • Number of lymph nodes (greater and lesser
    curvature, marked by surgeon)
  • Number of positive lymph nodes

81
CRITICS Blocks
  • Diagnostic purposes
  • At least 2x tumor (deepest invasion, junction
    tumor-normal mucosa)
  • Both surgical margins
  • Junction esophagus/stomoch for diagnosis of
    Barrett carcinoma (in case of proximal tumor)
  • At least 1x omentum
  • All lymph nodes
  • Frozen tissue (tumor and normal mucosa)

82
CRITICS Biobanking
  • When tumor size allows
  • Fresh
  • 1 container with vital tumor in liquid nitrogen
  • 1 container with normal mucosa in liquid nitrogen
  • After fixation
  • 1 paraffin block with vital tumor tissue
  • 1 paraffin block with normal gastric wall (incl.
    musc. propria)
  • Register duration of fixation

83
CRITICS Microscopy
  • Tumor type (WHO)
  • Depth of invasion
  • Angioinvasion
  • Surgical margins
  • Serosal surface
  • Other mucosal abnormalities
  • Regional lymph nodes
  • Marked lymh nodes

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CRITICS Pathology conclusion
  • Tumor type
  • Grade of differentiation
  • Localisation
  • Size
  • Depth of invasion
  • Surgical mucosal margins

90
CRITICS Pathology Summary
  • Diagnostic protocol
  • According to NVVP guidelines
  • Correlation of histopathological characteristics
    with clinical data
  • Biobanking
  • Correlation of molecular characteristics with
    clinical data

91
CRITICS Kidney functionRenography
92
CRITICS Kidney function Worsening of (left)
kidney function after AP-PA RT
Pre RT
T7m
T12m
L
T18m
T29m
T36m
93
IMRT Gastric Cancer
94
CRITICS Kidney and Liver functions
  • In order to preserve kidney and liver function,
    IMRT or at least 3-D CT-based conformal RT is
    mandatory
  • Pre- and postop CT-scanning
  • Pre RT renography
  • At least 2/3 of one kidney should receive lt 18 Gy
    (40)
  • Mean liver dose lt 30 Gy
  • Epid or conebeam verification

95
CRITICS ObjectivesPrimary
To assess whether postoperative chemoradiotherapy
prolongs overall survival compared to
postoperative chemotherapy in patients that have
had adequate stomach surgery following
preoperative chemotherapy
96
CRITICS ObjectivesSecondary
  • To assess whether postoperative chemoradiotherapy
    prolongs disease free survival compared to
    postoperative chemotherapy in patients that have
    had adequate stomach surgery following
    preoperative chemotherapy
  • To assess the toxicity profile of both
    preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy and
    postoperative chemoradiotherapy
  • To collect tissue and serum before treatment for
    genomic profiling and proteomics to detect tumor
    recurrence risk patterns in gastric cancer
  • To determine a genomic profile and classifier to
    predict response to therapy
  • To assess the value of Maruyama-index and
    predictive nomograms for disease recurrence
    (3940)
  • To compare health-related quality of life (HRQL)
    of both treatment regimens

97
CRITICS Inclusion criteria 1/2
  • Ib-IVa (no distant metastases) gastric cancer
    (histologically proven) tumor bulk has to be in
    the stomach but may involve gastro-esophageal
    junction
  • WHO lt 2
  • Age 18 yrs
  • Operable gastric cancer
  • No prior abdominal radiotherapy or chemotherapy
  • Hematology Hb ? 5.0 mmol/l leukocytes ?
    3.0x109/l, neutrophils ? 1.5x109/l, thrombocytes
    ? 100 x 109/l
  • Renal function serum creatinine 1.25 ULN,
    creatinine clearance ? 60 ml/min (measured, or
    calculated by Cockcroft and Gault formula) and
    urinary excretion of ? 1.0 gram protein/24
    hours

98
CRITICS Inclusion criteria 2/2
  • Liver function total bilirubin ?1.5x ULN,
    Alkaline phosphatase and ASAT/ALAT 3x ULN
  • Left ventricular ejection fraction gt 50
  • Tumornegative laparoscopy when CT suggests
    peritoneal carcinomatosis
  • Start treatment within 10 working days after
    registration
  • Written informed consent
  • Expected adequacy of follow-up

99
CRITICS Exclusion criteria 1/2
  • T1N0 disease (endoscopic ultrasound)
  • Distant metastases
  • Inoperable patients (due to technical
    surgery-related factors or general condition)
  • Previous malignancy (except adequately treated
    non-melanoma skin cancer or in-situ cancer of the
    cervix uteri)
  • Solitary functioning kidney that will be within
    the radiation field
  • Major surgery within 4 weeks prior to study
    treatment start, or lack of complete recovery
    from the effects of major surgery
  • Uncontrolled (bacterial) infections

100
CRITICS Exclusion criteria 1/2
  • Significant concomitant diseases preventing the
    safe administration of study drugs or likely to
    interfere with study assessments
  • Uncontrolled angina pectoris, cardiac failure or
    clinically significant arrhytmias
  • Continuous use of immunosuppressive agents
  • Concurrent use of the antiviral agent sorivudine
    or chemically related analogues, such as
    brivudine
  • Hearing loss gt CTC grade 1
  • Neurotoxicity gt CTC grade 1
  • Pregnancy or breast feeding
  • Patients (M/F) with reproductive potential not
    implementing adequate contraceptive measures

101
CRITICS Statistics
  • Assumptions
  • 5 year overall survival 40 in standard arm and
    50 in experimental arm
  • 10 drop out due to progressive disease
  • 10 loss to follow-up
  • 4 year accrual
  • 3 year follow-up
  • 80 power, significance level 5 (2-tailed)
  • 430 events required, HR experimental arm 0.76
  • 788 patients needed
  • 197 yearly accrual

102
CRITICS Interim analysis
  • After 215 events
  • First analysis, alpha level 0.003
  • Second analysis, alpha level 0.047
  • Overall alpha 0.05

103
Requirements Treatment and Follow-up
chemotherapy-surgery-chemotherapy arm
Q 6 months until 5 years, yearly
104
Requirements Treatment and Follow-up
chemotherapy-surgery-chemoradiotherapy arm
Q 6 months until 5 years, yearly
105
Local approvalInsurance
  • Central insurance Gerling Allgemeine
    Versicherungs AG
  • Amsterdam
  • ? 020 - 54 92 213

106
Local approvalSupport
  • Raymond Schmidt Consultancy
  • Dr. A. Ariensstraat 45
  • 7221 CB Steenderen
  • ? 0575 441 001
  • ? 0575 441 045
  • ? rsc_at_rsconsultancy.nl
  • After receipt of the FAX form RSC will contact
    you

107
Randomisation procedure
  • Via Datacenter of the Dept. of Surgery, LUMC
  • ? 071 526 3500
  • Monday-Friday, 900 1700 uur

108
Randomisation procedure
109
Serious Adverse Event reports
  • Directly to AvL
  • Within 24 hours

110
Tissue Collection
  • Optional
  • Patient gives separate informed consent
  • Approved by central METC
  • Special pathology handbook /sheet

111
Financial Support
No investigator fee..
112
Organization
  • Principal investigators
  • Professor M. Verheij, radiation oncologist, AvL
  • E.P.M. Jansen, radiation oncologist, AvL
  • Professor C.J.H. van de Velde, surgeon, LUMC
  • H. Boot, gastroenterologist, AvL
  • A. Cats, gastroenterologist/medical oncologist,
    AvL
  • Professor G.A. Meijer, pathologist, VUMC
  • Professor N.K. Aaronson, quality of life, AvL
  • H. Putter, statistician, LUMC
  • E. Meershoek Klein Kranenbarg, datacenter, LUMC
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