Biliary Stenting With or Without Photodynamic Therapy in Treating Patients With Locally Advanced, Recurrent, or Metastatic Cholangiocarcinoma or Other Biliary Tract Tumors That Cannot Be Removed by Surgery (Photostent-02)
Porfimer Sodium Photodynamic Therapy Plus Stenting Versus Stenting Alone in Patients With Advanced or Metastatic Cholangiocarcinomas and Other Biliary Tract Tumours: a Multicentre, Randomised, Phase Lll Study
Sponsor: University College, London
Listed as NCT00513539, this PHASE3 trial focuses on Extrahepatic Bile Duct Cancer and Gallbladder Cancer and remains completed. Sponsored by University College, London, it has been updated 6 times since 2007, reflecting limited change activity. This study contributes to the evolving evidence base for cancer treatment protocols.
Study Description(click to expand)OBJECTIVES: Primary * To assess the efficacy, in terms of overall survival, of biliary stenting with vs without photodynamic therapy using porfimer sodium in advanced, recurrent, or metastatic biliary tract carcinoma. Secondary * To evaluate the two treatments arms with respect to progression-free survival, toxicity using NCI Common Toxicity Criteria (version 3.0), and quality of life. OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study. Patients are stratified by participating center, primary site (gallbladder vs bile duct), disease stage (locally advanced vs metastatic), prior therapy (i.e., surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy) (yes vs no), performance score (0 vs 1 vs 2 vs 3), and prior treatment arm on UK chemotherapy trial ABC-02 (gemcitabine hydrochloride alone vs gemcitabine hydrochloride and cisplatin). Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 arms. * Arm I: Patients undergo either endoscopic or percutaneous drainage and insertion of unilateral or bilateral plastic endoprostheses above the main strictures of the right and left hepatic bile ducts. * Arm II: Patients undergo treatment as in arm I. Patients also receive porfimer sodium IV and then undergo laser activation 48 hours later. After completion of study treatment, patients are followed every 3 months for at least 3 years. Peer Reviewed and Funded or Endorsed...
OBJECTIVES:
Primary
* To assess the efficacy, in terms of overall survival, of biliary stenting with vs without photodynamic therapy using porfimer sodium in advanced, recurrent, or metastatic biliary tract carcinoma.
Secondary
* To evaluate the two treatments arms with respect to progression-free survival, toxicity using NCI Common Toxicity Criteria (version 3.0), and quality of life.
OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study. Patients are stratified by participating center, primary site (gallbladder vs bile duct), disease stage (locally advanced vs metastatic), prior therapy (i.e., surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy) (yes vs no), performance score (0 vs 1 vs 2 vs 3), and prior treatment arm on UK chemotherapy trial ABC-02 (gemcitabine hydrochloride alone vs gemcitabine hydrochloride and cisplatin). Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 arms.
* Arm I: Patients undergo either endoscopic or percutaneous drainage and insertion of unilateral or bilateral plastic endoprostheses above the main strictures of the right and left hepatic bile ducts. * Arm II: Patients undergo treatment as in arm I. Patients also receive porfimer sodium IV and then undergo laser activation 48 hours later.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed every 3 months for at least 3 years.
Peer Reviewed and Funded or Endorsed by Cancer Research UK.
Status Flow
Change History
6 versions recorded-
Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
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Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
▶ Show 1 earlier version
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Jan 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
First recorded
Jul 2007
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- University College, London
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .