Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare endocrine malignancy with an annual rate of
0.5.2 cases per million population. Despite complete resection of early-stage disease
recurrence rates in ACC are very high (60%.70%). Patients with Ki67 ≥ 10% are considered
at high risk for ACC recurrence, whereas patients with Ki67<10% are considered to have
low/intermediate risk for recurrence. Due to rarity of the disease no data from
randomized clinical trials are available on the efficacy of any adjuvant therapies.
Mitotane has been widely used in the adjuvant setting in ACC on the basis of the findings
of a retrospective multicenter report in which relapse free survival (RFS) was
significantly prolonged in patients treated with adjuvant mitotane compared with two
control groups who were not given mitotane. The retrospective design of this study
resulted in controversy about the benefit of adjuvant mitotane and led to a prospective
clinical trial to compare mitotane to placebo as adjuvant therapy in
low-risk/intermediate-risk ACC patients who have low Ki67 expression (<10%; ADIUVO study,
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00777244).
No study are ongoing on adjuvant systemic therapy in ACC patients that are at high risk
of relapse. These patients represent 70-80% of all ACC radically operated. In this
setting mitotane is widely prescribed. The efficacy of mitotane is known to be dependent
on the attainment of serum drug levels in the so called therapeutic range that is above
14 mg/l. These mitotane levels should be maintained over time. The results of a recent
retrospective analysis on the impact of serum mitotane levels on prognosis in 122 ACC
patients, who were radically resected, showed that the 63 patients who reached and
maintained the target mitotane concentrations during follow-up had a significantly lower
rate of recurrence than the 59 patients who failed to keep mitotane levels as high.
However, the attainment of therapeutic range of mitotane usually require 2-3 months
whatever is the schedule adopted. ACC patients with high relapse risk may develop disease
recurrence before mitotane serum levels attain the target concentration.
Chemotherapy with cisplatin containing regimen was shown to be efficacious in the
management of ACC in few phase II trials.
The results of the only phase III trial conducted up to now, the FIRM-ACT study, found
that mitotane combined with cisplatin-based chemotherapy was superior to mitotane
combined with streptozocin in terms of progression free survival and overall survival in
patients with advanced/metastatic ACC. The cytotoxic activity of chemotherapy is rapid
and this is the rationale of administering a cisplatin containing regimen in adjuvant
setting of ACC patients with high risk of disease relapse.
Adjuvant mitotane treatment improved RFS and overall survival (OS) in a retrospective
study, and adjuvant mitotane is undergoing prospective evaluation in
low-risk/intermediate-risk ACC patients (Ki67<10%; ADIUVO study). However, Mitotane alone
could be not adequate as adjuvant therapy in highly proliferating ACC since the drug
efficacy is strictly dependent on the attainment of circulating concentration levels >14
mg/l that is usually achieved after 2-3 months of therapy. In this lead time disease
recurrence may occur.
Based on the background, there is a strong rationale of administering chemotherapy in
radically operated ACC patients with high risk of relapse defined as follows: stage I-III
ACC (according to the ENSAT classification) with either microscopically complete
resection (R0), microscopically positive margins (R1), or undetermined margins (RX) and
Ki67≥10% (for a further definition of this condition, see the study population
paragraph). In clinical practice, adjuvant mitotane alone or cisplatin-based chemotherapy
or the combination of both are used worldwide in patients at high risk of relapse, but
there is no prospective validation of these treatments.
In this multicenter prospective randomized clinical study, that will test the efficacy of
the combination of cisplatin plus etoposide (plus/minus mitotane according to the
investigator preference) in comparison with the actual best routine practice consisting
of mitotane or no therapy (according to the personal belief of clinical investigator).
This proposed randomized prospective study is needed to assess the efficacy and safety of
chemotherapy with a cisplatin regimen in high-risk ACC patients after initial surgical
resection. There are no studies ongoing testing any adjuvant therapies in radically
operated ACC with high risk of relapse and death.
STUDY DESIGN AND DURATION
The study is designed as a prospective, randomized, open-label, stratified, nation-based
multi-center, phase III trial for patients with ACC and Ki67≥10% after resection with
curative intent.
Patients will be stratified on the basis of the European Network for the Study of Adrenal
Tumors (ENSAT) stage (I/II vs. III) and whether the clinical investigator decide to
administer mitotane or not.
The evaluation of ACC recurrence with imaging techniques (TC scan or MR) will be
performed every 4 months for the first 2 years and then every 6 months till the 4th year.
In this study, the planned patient enrollment time is two years and the follow-up time is
one year.
An international large scale prospective randomized clinical trial with a similar design
of the present study is currently being submitted to national and international calls for
funds. If this trial will be funded and will start, the present trial will converge to
the international one, and the funds obtained by AIFA wil be employed to manage the
italian part.
STUDY POPULATION
The patients that will be enrolled in this study will have newly diagnosed and radically
operated ACC at high risk of disease recurrence defined as follows:
SAMPLE SIZE
The sample size calculation is performed on the basis of the following assumption. The
median RFS for the mitotane group with Ki67≥10% is estimated to be 20 months. It is
assume that Cisplatin + Etoposide therapy can reduce the risk of disease recurrence or
death assuming a median RFS of 34 months for arm A, which translates into a hazard ratio
(Cisplatin + Etoposide [+/- mitotane] vs. observation [+/- mitotane] of 0.59, and a
drop-off rate of 5% in each arm. Therefore, a total sample size of 198 patients (rounded
to 200, 100 in each arm) is needed to achieve a power of 80% to detect an improvement in
median RFS of 14-months (from 20 months to 34), with a one-sided significance level of
0.05 and an interim analysis when 1/3 of events will be recorded. The study duration is
expected to be about 3 years: 2-years for recruitment and 1-year of minimum follow-up.
The Clinical Epidemiology Unit - Clinical Trial Center of the Città della Salute e della
University Hospital in Turin, will provide a web based procedure for randomization and a
dedicated database for eCRF (www.epiclin.it).
METHODS
Etoposide 100 mg/m2 will be administered IV on days 1, 2, 3 diluted in 500 mL of isotonic
NaCl or 5% dextrose over 60 minutes.
Cisplatin, 80 mg/m2 will be administered IV on day 1, diluted in 500 mL of isotonic NaCl,
over 60 minutes. Before cisplatin, 1000 ml isotonic NaCl with addition of 20 mmol
potassium is given during 2 h. Cisplatin infusion is administered over 60 minutes.
Cisplatin administration is followed by 1000 ml isotonic NaCl with addition of 5 mmol
Magnesium and 20 mmol potassium during 1 hour. 500 mL mannitol IV can also be
administered at a concentration of 150 mg/mL during 1 hour according to the inestigator
routine clinical practice. Injections of small doses of diuretics (e.g. furosemide 10-20
mg) should be given IV to ensure diuresis and avoid retention of fluids.
Cisplatin and etoposide regimen will be administered every 21 days for 4 cycles.
Treatment should start within 7 days from randomization. If the clinical investigator
decide to prescribe mitotane (alone or in combination with chemotherapy according to the
randomization treatment arm), the drug will be administered orally to reach a plasma
level of 14.20 mg/L (or the maximum tolerated dose if unable to reach therapeutic
levels). The mitotane dosage scheme is the responsibility of the local investigator, but
an initial dose of 3.6 g daily is usually prescribed to reach therapeutic plasma mitotane
levels (14.20 mg/L). Dosage will be further adjusted according to blood concentrations
and clinical assessment.
Analysis of serum mitotane levels will be performed monthly by a reputable clinical
laboratory chosen by each center to reflect clinical practice patterns. All patients on
mitotane will receive concomitant glucocorticoid replacement therapy with the option of
using plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone levels to guide steroid replacement.
Mitotane will be administered to the two study arms until ACC relapse, intolerable
toxicity, or for a total period of 2 years.
RANDOMIZATION
The randomization procedure will be performed online and implemented with the electronic
case report form at the web-site www.epiclin.cpo.it.
The procedure will be stratified on the following factors:
Mitotane use Disease stage (I/II vs. III) Ki67 percentage (10%.20% vs. >20%)
SCHEDULED VISITS AND PROCEDURES
The baseline evaluation (1 week before randomization) includes:
History and physical examination Concomitant medications Surgical and pathological
reports Complete blood count Serum biochemistry profile, lipid profile Endocrine
assessment: serum cortisol, testosterone (in women), 17-hydroxyprogesterone,
dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, aldosterone, estradiol (in men and postmenopausal women),
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), plasma renin activity, free T4, and TSH Pregnancy
test in women of childbearing potential every 3 months or if there is suspicion for
pregnancy EKG CT with contrast (or MRI) of the chest/abdomen/pelvis performed no more
than 4 weeks before randomization Written informed consent After the completion of
baseline procedures, the patient will be randomized.
The subsequent visits will be as follows:
Arm A (cisplatin+etoposide +/- mitotane): in the first 12 weeks after randomization,
clinical visits every 3 weeks (±3 days) will include:
Physical examination Report of side effects and concomitant medications CBC Serum
chemistry profile Endocrine assessment Serum mitotane evaluation (if applicable)
Arm B (mitotane or observation): in the first 12 weeks after randomization, every 4
weeks, clinical visits will include:
Physical examination Report of concomitant medications If the patient is receiving
mitotane the following data will be requested Report of side effects CBC Serum chemistry
profile Endocrine assessment Serum mitotane measurement At 16 weeks (in both study arms),
and every 16 weeks until ACC recurrence cross-sectional imaging studies (MRI or CT with
contrast medium) of the chest/abdomen/pelvis will be performed. Further imaging can be
ordered if deemed necessary by the local investigator (CT or MRI of the brain or bone
assessment).
After the first 12 weeks (in both study arms) until ACC recurrence: Every 12 weeks, the
clinical visit will include:
Physical examination Report of concomitant medications and side effects CBC Serum
chemistry profile Endocrine assessment.