The RENAISSANCE (AIO-FLOT5) trial: effect of chemotherapy alone vs. chemotherapy followed by surgical resection on survival and quality of life in patients with limited-metastatic adenocarcinoma of the stomach or esophagogastric junction – a phase III trial of the German AIO/CAO-V/CAOGI
Salah-Eddin Al-Batran,
Thorsten O. Goetze,
Daniel W. Mueller,
Arndt Vogel,
Michael Winkler,
Sylvie Lorenzen,
Alexander Novotny,
Claudia Pauligk,
Nils Homann,
Thomas Jungbluth,
Christoph Reissfelder,
Karel Caca,
Steffen Retter,
Eva Horndasch,
Julia Gumpp,
Claus Bolling,
Karl-Hermann Fuchs,
Wolfgang Blau,
Winfried Padberg,
Michael Pohl,
Andreas Wunsch,
Patrick Michl,
Frank Mannes,
Matthias Schwarzbach,
Harald Schmalenberg,
Michael Hohaus,
Christian Scholz,
Christoph Benckert,
Jorge Riera Knorrenschild,
Veit Kanngießer,
Thomas Zander,
Hakan Alakus,
Ralf-Dieter Hofheinz,
Claus Roedel,
Manish A. Shah,
Mitsuru Sasako,
Dietmar Lorenz,
Jakob Izbicki,
Wolf O. Bechstein,
Hauke Lang,
Stefan P. Moenig
Affiliations
Salah-Eddin Al-Batran
Institute of Clinical Cancer Research (IKF) at Krankenhaus Nordwest, UCT-University Cancer Center
Thorsten O. Goetze
Institute of Clinical Cancer Research (IKF) at Krankenhaus Nordwest, UCT-University Cancer Center
Daniel W. Mueller
Institute of Clinical Cancer Research (IKF) at Krankenhaus Nordwest, UCT-University Cancer Center
Arndt Vogel
Department of Internal Medicine, Hannover Medical School
Michael Winkler
Department of Surgery, Hannover Medical School
Sylvie Lorenzen
Department of Internal Medicine, Klinikum rechts der Isar der TU München
Alexander Novotny
Department of Surgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar der TU München
Claudia Pauligk
Institute of Clinical Cancer Research (IKF) at Krankenhaus Nordwest, UCT-University Cancer Center
Nils Homann
Department of Internal Medicine II, Academic Teaching Hospital Wolfsburg
Thomas Jungbluth
Department of Surgery, Academic Teaching Hospital Wolfsburg
Christoph Reissfelder
Department of Surgery, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus Dresden
Karel Caca
Department of Internal Medicine, Klinikum Ludwigsburg
Steffen Retter
Department of Surgery, Klinikum Ludwigsburg
Eva Horndasch
Department of Internal Medicine, Kliniken des Landkreises Neumarkt
Julia Gumpp
Department of Surgery, Kliniken des Landkreises Neumarkt
Claus Bolling
Department of Internal Medicine, Agaplesion Markus Krankenhaus Frankfurter, Diakonie Kliniken gGmbH
Karl-Hermann Fuchs
Department of Surgery, Agaplesion Markus Krankenhaus Frankfurter Diakonie Kliniken gGmbH
Wolfgang Blau
Department of Medical Oncology, Gießen University Hospital
Winfried Padberg
Department of Surgery, Gießen University Hospital
Michael Pohl
Department of Internal Medicine, Ruhr-University Bochum
Andreas Wunsch
Department of Surgery, Ruhr-University Bochum
Patrick Michl
Department of Medical Oncology, Halle University Hospital
Frank Mannes
Department of Internal Medicine, Halle University Hospital
Matthias Schwarzbach
Department of Surgery, Klinikum Frankfurt Höchst
Harald Schmalenberg
Department of Internal Medicine IV, Städtisches Klinikum Dresden
Michael Hohaus
Department of Surgery, Städtisches Klinikum Dresden
Christian Scholz
Department of Medical Oncology, Vivantes Klinikum Am Urban Berlin
Christoph Benckert
Department of Surgery, Vivantes Klinikum Am Urban Berlin
Jorge Riera Knorrenschild
Department of Medical Oncology, Marburg University Hospital
Veit Kanngießer
Department of Surgery, Marburg University Hospital
Thomas Zander
Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Köln
Hakan Alakus
Department of Surgery, University Hospital Köln
Ralf-Dieter Hofheinz
University Medical Center Mannheim
Claus Roedel
Department of Radiation- Oncology, Frankfurt University Hospital
Manish A. Shah
Department of Medicine Hematology and Oncology, Weill Cornell Medicine
Mitsuru Sasako
Department of Surgery, Hyogo College of Medicine
Dietmar Lorenz
Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Sana- Klinikum Offenbach
Jakob Izbicki
Department of Surgery, Hamburg University Hospital
Wolf O. Bechstein
Department of Surgery, Frankfurt University Hospital
Hauke Lang
Department of Surgery, Mainz University Hospital
Stefan P. Moenig
Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève, Service de Chirurgie viscéral
Abstract Background Historical data indicate that surgical resection may benefit select patients with metastatic gastric and gastroesophageal junction cancer. However, randomized clinical trials are lacking. The current RENAISSANCE trial addresses the potential benefits of surgical intervention in gastric and gastroesophageal junction cancer with limited metastases. Methods This is a prospective, multicenter, randomized, investigator-initiated phase III trial. Previously untreated patients with limited metastatic stage (retroperitoneal lymph node metastases only or a maximum of one incurable organ site that is potentially resectable or locally controllable with or without retroperitoneal lymph nodes) receive 4 cycles of FLOT chemotherapy alone or with trastuzumab if Her2+. Patients without disease progression after 4 cycles are randomized 1:1 to receive additional chemotherapy cycles or surgical resection of primary and metastases followed by subsequent chemotherapy. 271 patients are to be allocated to the trial, of which at least 176 patients will proceed to randomization. The primary endpoint is overall survival; main secondary endpoints are quality of life assessed by EORTC-QLQ-C30 questionnaire, progression free survival and surgical morbidity and mortality. Recruitment has already started; currently (Feb 2017) 22 patients have been enrolled. Discussion If the RENAISSANCE concept proves to be effective, this could potentially lead to a new standard of therapy. On the contrary, if the outcome is negative, patients with gastric or GEJ cancer and metastases will no longer be considered candidates for surgical intervention. Trial registration The article reports of a health care intervention on human participants and is registered on October 12, 2015 under ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02578368 ; EudraCT: 2014–002665-30.