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NCT06781112

A Phase II Study of TPF With PD-1 Inhibitor Induction Therapy for Locally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

Not yet recruiting Phase 2 Last updated 17 January 2025
What this trial tests

Phase 2 trial testing albumin paclitaxel (200mg/m2), cisplatin (60mg/m2, infused over 3 days), 5-fluorouracil (3000mg/m2, continuously intravenously pumped for 120 hours), and tislelizumab ( 200mg). in TPF in 35 participants. Not yet recruiting.

Timeline
20 January 2025
Primary endpoint
31 December 2027
31 December 2028

Quick facts

Lead sponsorWeiwei Zhang
PhasePhase 2
StatusNot yet recruiting
Study typeINTERVENTIONAL
Allocationna
Designsingle group
Maskingnone
Primary purposetreatment
Enrollment35
Start date20 January 2025
Primary completion31 December 2027
Estimated completion31 December 2028
Sites1 location across China

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Weiwei Zhang

Who can join

Adults 18 to 75, any sex, with TPF or Immunotherapy. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

NPC is one of the most common malignant tumors in the head and neck region of China. Currently, the main treatment regimen for LA-NPC is radical concurrent chemoradiotherapy combined with induction or adjuvant chemotherapy. However, after radical radiotherapy and chemotherapy treatment, 15% -30% of patients still experience recurrence or distant metastasis. At present, the treatment options for R/M-NPC are very limited, especially for patients with recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma who have failed second-line treatment, there is no standard treatment plan. Therefore, it is urgent to study a new treatment mode to improve the therapeutic efficacy of LA-NPC, thereby reducing the recurrence and metastasis rates. This study explores the safety and efficacy of TPF combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor induction therapy in LA-NPC patients through prospective research. The results of this study are expected to provide new ideas and methods for the treatment of LA-NPC and provide reference for clinical practice. The investigators believe that induction chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy has broad application prospects in the field of LA-NPC, and is expected to bring better treatment effects and quality of life to patients, bringing new hope to the medical community and patients. According to the inclusion criteria, eligible patients will be included: Induction chemotherapy with Tislelizumab combined with TPF regimen, administered every 3 weeks: albumin paclitaxel (200mg/m2), cisplatin (60mg/m2, infused over 3 days), 5-fluorouracil (3000mg/m2, continuously intravenously pumped for 120 hours), and PD-1 inhibitor (Tislelizumab 200mg). All patients received 3 cycles of induction therapy followed by radical concurrent chemoradiotherapy combined with Tislelizumab (200mg) treatment, Q3W. The cisplatin in the synchronous chemoradiotherapy regimen is administered once a week, with a dose of 40mg/m2 per dose, and the total dose of cisplatin does not exceed 100mg/m2. For patients who cannot tolerate cisplatin during synchronous radiotherapy and chemotherapy, cisplatin may not be combined. The IMRT radiotherapy area includes the primary tumor volume (GTVp), the total tumor volume of the affected lymph nodes (GTVn), the high-risk clinical target volume (CTV1), and the low-risk clinical target volume (CTV2). PTVp, PTV1, and PTV2 are respectively expanded by 3mm on GTVp, CTV1, and CTV2. The prescription doses for PTVp, PTVn, PTV1, and PTV2 are 70-72 Gy, 66-70 Gy, 60-68 Gy, and 54-58 Gy, respectively, with a total of 30-33 divided exposures. After the completion of synchronous radiotherapy and chemotherapy, adjuvant therapy with Tislelizumab (Tislelizumab 200mg d1, once every 3 weeks, for a total of 8 courses) is administered. For patients with high-risk recurrence factors (T4 or N2), combination chemotherapy with capecitabine 625mg/m2 po bid is performed for one year. Treat until any of the following conditions occur: Disease progression; No clinical benefit; Intolerable toxicity; Withdrawal of informed consent; Or maintain treatment for up to six months.

Publications & conference data

1 peer-reviewed publication reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):

  1. Non‑endemic non‑keratinizing nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Long‑term toxicity following chemoradiation.
    Jovanovic Ristivojevic J, Jovanovic Korda N, Vujanac V, Nikitovic M, et al · · 2025 · cited 1× · PMID 40247988 · DOI 10.3892/ol.2025.15029

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