Effect of multimodal intervention care on cachexia in patients with advanced cancer compared to conventional management (MIRACLE): An open-label, phase 2 trial.

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. TPS12134-TPS12134
Author(s):  
Chi Hoon Maeng ◽  
Bo-Hyung Kim ◽  
Jinmann Chon ◽  
Won Sub Kang ◽  
Kyounglan Kang ◽  
...  

TPS12134 Background: Cancer Cachexia (CC) is a multi-factorial process characterized by progressive weight loss, muscle mass and fat tissue wasting, and adversely affecting the quality of life and survival in patients with advanced stage of cancer. CC has a complex and multi-factorial pathophysiology, and there is no established standard treatment. Once it occurs, it is often irreversible and also difficult to suppress the its progression with any single treatment modality. We are conducting an open-label, parallel, randomized phase 2 trial to investigate the effect on preventing or alleviating cancer cachexia and safety of a multi-modal intervention including anti-inflammation, omega-3-fatty acids, nutritional supplement with counselling, physical exercise, psychiatric intervention as well as bojungikki-tang, which mediates immune-modulation and reverse inflammation-related chronic consumptive wasting condition as a complementary and alternative medicine compared to patients receiving best supportive care. Methods: Eligible criteria included patients with recurrent or metastatic gastrointestinal (gastric, colorectal and pancreaticobiliary) as well as lung cancer undergoing active palliative chemotherapy. Patients who have already developed refractory cachexia (ie, low performance status, difficult to take medications orally or visit the hospital to exercise) are excluded. Patients are randomized into experimental arm (Multi-modal intervention care: MIC) versus control arm (Conventional Palliative Care, CPC). MIC are comprised of 1) daily oral medications; ibuprofen 400 mg three times a day, omega-3-fatty acid 1 g twice a day, Bojungikki-tang 3.75g twice a day, oral nutritional supplement (HAMONILAN SOLN) 200 ml twice a day, and 2) clinical interventions; weekly physical exercise (60 minutes per visit), psychiatric assessment on every other week, and nutritional counselling total four times during the study period. CPC included basic nutritional counselling for two times provided by National Health Insurance Service, and megestrol acetate as needed (ie, anorexia ≥ Grade 2). All interventions were provided during 12 weeks per subject. Co-primary outcomes are change of total lean body mass and handgrip strength from the baseline. Secondary outcomes included change of fat mass and total body mass, lean body mass, Functional Assessment of Anorexia/Cachexia Treatment (FAACT) score, quality of life assessed by EORTC QLQ-C30, Spleen Qi Deficiency questionnaire (SQDQ), and overall survival. Total 112 patients will be assigned in the two arms (56 in each group). We have started the study in October 2020. At the time of submission, 26 patients were enrolled. Planned period of enrollment is 18 months. Clinical trial information: Clinical Research information Service, CRIS (KCT0004967). Clinical trial information: KCT0004967.

Author(s):  
David Lin ◽  
Allan Klein ◽  
David Cella ◽  
Anna Beutler ◽  
Fang Fang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Impact of recurrent pericarditis (RP) on patient health-related quality of life (HRQoL) was evaluated through qualitative patient interviews and as an exploratory endpoint in a Phase 2 trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of rilonacept (IL-1α/IL-1β blocker) to treat RP.Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted with ten adults with RP to understand symptoms and HRQoL impacts, and the 10-item Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Global Health (PROMIS Global) v1.2 was evaluated to determine questionnaire coverage of patient experience. The Phase 2 trial enrolled participants with active symptomatic RP (A-RP, n=16) and corticosteroid-dependent participants with no active recurrence at baseline (CSD-RP, n=9). All participants received rilonacept weekly for 6 weeks during a base treatment period (TP) plus an optional 18-week extension period (EP). Concomitant medications, including corticosteroids (CS), were tapered, if possible, during EP. HRQoL was assessed using the PROMIS Global, and patient-reported pain and blood levels of c-reactive protein (CRP) were also collected at Baseline and follow-up periods. Results: Information from qualitative interviews demonstrated that PROMIS GH concepts are relevant to adults with RP. From the Phase 2 trial, both participant groups showed impacted HRQoL at Baseline [mean PROMIS Global Physical Health (GPH) and Global Mental Health (GMH), were lower than population norm average]. In A-RP, GPH/MPH improved by end of base TP and were sustained through EP (similar trends were observed for pain and CRP). Similarly, in CSD-RP, GPH/MPH improved by end of TP and further improved at EP, during CS tapering or discontinuation, without disease recurrence (low pain scores and CRP levels continued during the TP and EP). Conclusion: This is the first study demonstrating impaired HRQoL in RP. Rilonacept treatment was associated with HRQoL improvements using PROMIS GH scores. Maintained/improved HRQoL during tapering/withdrawal of CS without recurrence suggests that rilonacept may provide an alternative to corticosteroids. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov; NCT03980522; 5 June 2019, retrospectively registered; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03980522


2015 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. E214-E215
Author(s):  
A. Tetreault ◽  
T.V. Nguyen-Huynh ◽  
F. Vincent ◽  
F. Saad ◽  
N. Benoit ◽  
...  

Cancer ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 124 (13) ◽  
pp. 2841-2849 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret K. Guerriero ◽  
Mary W. Redman ◽  
Kelsey K. Baker ◽  
Renato G. Martins ◽  
Keith Eaton ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S291-S292
Author(s):  
E Louis ◽  
W J Sandborn ◽  
G D’Haens ◽  
F Baert ◽  
J Kalabic ◽  
...  

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