BMC Cancer (Apr 2022)

FIRE-9 – PORT / AIO-KRK-0418: a prospective, randomized, open, multicenter Phase III trial to investigate the efficacy of adjuvant/additive chemotherapy in patients with definitely-treated metastatic colorectal cancer

  • Nathanael Raschzok,
  • Sebastian Stintzing,
  • Volker Heinemann,
  • Geraldine Rauch,
  • Jens Ricke,
  • Matthias Guckenberger,
  • Annika Kurreck,
  • Annabel H. S. Alig,
  • Arndt Stahler,
  • Lars Bullinger,
  • Moritz Schmelzle,
  • Wenzel Schöning,
  • Georg Lurje,
  • Felix Krenzien,
  • Oliver Haase,
  • Beate Rau,
  • Bernhard Gebauer,
  • Igor M. Sauer,
  • Johann Pratschke,
  • Dominik P. Modest

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-022-09422-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Additive/adjuvant chemotherapy as concept after local treatment of colorectal metastases has not been proven to be successful by phase III trials. Accordingly, a standard of care to improve relapse rates and long-term survival is not established and adjuvant chemotherapy cannot be recommended as a standard therapy due to limited evidence in literature. The PORT trial aims to generate evidence that post-resection/ablation/radiation chemotherapy improves the survival in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Methods Patients to be included into this trial must have synchronous or metachronous metastases of colorectal cancer—either resected (R0 or R1) and/or effectively treated by ablation or radiation within 3–10 weeks before randomization—and have the primary tumor resected, without radiographic evidence of active metastatic disease at study entry. The primary endpoint of the trial is progression-free survival after 24 months, secondary endpoints include overall survival, safety, quality of life, treatments (including efficacy) beyond study participation, translational endpoints, and others. One arm of the study comprising 2/3 of the population will be treated for 6 months with modified FOLFOXIRI or modified FOLFOX6 (investigator´s choice, depending on the performance status of the patients but determined before randomization), while the other arm (1/3 of the population) will be observed and undergo scheduled follow-up computed tomography scans according to the interventional arm. Discussion Optimal oncological management after removal of colorectal metastases is unclear. The PORT trial aims to generate evidence that additive/adjuvant chemotherapy after definitive treatment of colorectal metastases improves progression free and overall survival in patients with colorectal cancer. Trial registration This study is registered with clinicaltrials.gov ( NCT05008809 ) and EudraCT (2020–006,144-18).

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