deltatrials
Active Not Recruiting INTERVENTIONAL NCT01841736

Pazopanib Hydrochloride in Treating Patients With Progressive Carcinoid Tumors

Prospective Randomized Phase II Trial of Pazopanib (NSC #737754) Versus Placebo in Patients With Progressive Carcinoid Tumors

Sponsor: National Cancer Institute (NCI)

Updated 57 times since 2017 Last updated: Apr 30, 2026 Started: Sep 20, 2013 Primary completion: Mar 5, 2019 Completion: Sep 10, 2026
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

This observational or N/A phase trial investigates Foregut Neuroendocrine Tumor and Hindgut Neuroendocrine Tumor and is currently ongoing. National Cancer Institute (NCI) leads this study, which shows 57 recorded versions since 2013 — indicating substantial longitudinal coverage. As an oncology study, it adds to the longitudinal record of treatment development for this indication.

Study Description(click to expand)

PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: I. For patients with progressive carcinoid tumors, progression-free survival (PFS defined by central review according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors \[RECIST\] 1.1) will be compared between patients randomized to treatment with pazopanib (pazopanib hydrochloride) versus placebo. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. Overall survival (OS) will be compared between treatment arms. II. Objective response rate, duration of response, and time to treatment failure will be compared between treatment arms. III. Progression free survival (PFS) as assessed by central radiology review and local radiology review will be compared overall and within treatment arms. IV. Safety and tolerability of treatment with pazopanib/placebo will be evaluated within each treatment arm. V. PFS and other indicators of efficacy will be estimated in patients who crossover to pazopanib from placebo. VI. To determine the turn-around time for timely adjudicated central review. VII. To characterize the nature of discordance between local and central radiology review in assessment of progression. VIII. To characterize the type and rate of progression in carcinoid (at study entry, on-study, and at progression). IX. To develop new methods for modeling carcinoid growth and detecting treatment effects, and to perform simulations that advance new clinical trial designs to apply to future trials...

PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:

I. For patients with progressive carcinoid tumors, progression-free survival (PFS defined by central review according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors \[RECIST\] 1.1) will be compared between patients randomized to treatment with pazopanib (pazopanib hydrochloride) versus placebo.

SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:

I. Overall survival (OS) will be compared between treatment arms. II. Objective response rate, duration of response, and time to treatment failure will be compared between treatment arms.

III. Progression free survival (PFS) as assessed by central radiology review and local radiology review will be compared overall and within treatment arms.

IV. Safety and tolerability of treatment with pazopanib/placebo will be evaluated within each treatment arm.

V. PFS and other indicators of efficacy will be estimated in patients who crossover to pazopanib from placebo.

VI. To determine the turn-around time for timely adjudicated central review. VII. To characterize the nature of discordance between local and central radiology review in assessment of progression.

VIII. To characterize the type and rate of progression in carcinoid (at study entry, on-study, and at progression).

IX. To develop new methods for modeling carcinoid growth and detecting treatment effects, and to perform simulations that advance new clinical trial designs to apply to future trials of carcinoid therapeutics.

X. To assess for differences in quality of life (QOL)-related domains between the two treatment groups (pazopanib versus placebo).

XI. To determine if the more brief measures of QOL-related domains provide comparable information to that which is provided by the longer assessments (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer \[EORTC\], neuroendocrine tumors \[NET\]21).

XII. To provide validation data for the EORTC NET21 module in terms of responsiveness over time and differences across arms.

XIII. To determine whether components of the plasma angiome panel that have been shown to be predictive previously (interleukin-6 \[IL-6\] and vascular endothelial growth factor \[VEGF\]-D) are predictive of a therapeutic advantage for pazopanib treatment in baseline samples from the patients treated on A021202.

XIV. To determine whether other components of the plasma angiome panel tested (not IL-6 and VEGF-D) are predictive of a therapeutic advantage for pazopanib treatment in baseline samples from the patients treated on A021202.

XV. To evaluate the changes in the plasma angiome markers after treatment with or without pazopanib over time.

EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES:

I. PFS at 6 months will be estimated within each treatment arm. II. Biochemical response (for chromogranin A, defined as a decrease of 50% or more in chromogranin A levels from baseline and for 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid \[5-HIAA\], defined as a decrease of 50% or more in urinary 5-HIAA levels from baseline) will be compared between treatment arms among patients with elevated baseline levels of chromogranin A (CGA) and 5-HIAA.

OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 treatment arms.

ARM I: Patients receive pazopanib hydrochloride orally (PO) once daily (QD) on days 1-28. Cycles repeat every 28 days in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Patients undergo echocardiography (ECHO) or multigated acquisition scan (MUGA) during screening. Patients also undergo computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and chest x-ray throughout the trial. Patients may optionally undergo blood sample collection during screening and on study.

ARM II: Patients receive placebo PO QD on days 1-28. Cycles repeat every 28 days in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. At the time of progressive disease, patients may cross-over to Arm I. Patients undergo ECHO or MUGA during screening. Patients also undergo CT, MRI, and chest x-ray throughout the trial. Patients may optionally undergo blood sample collection during screening and on study.

After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3-6 months for 5 years.

Status Flow

~Jan 2017 – ~Feb 2017 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Feb 2017 – ~May 2017 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~May 2017 – ~Jun 2017 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jun 2017 – ~Dec 2017 · 6 months · monthly snapshot~Dec 2017 – ~Feb 2018 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Feb 2018 – ~Jun 2018 · 4 months · monthly snapshot~Jun 2018 – ~Jul 2018 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Jul 2018 – ~Aug 2018 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Aug 2018 – ~Oct 2018 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Oct 2018 – ~Jan 2019 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Jan 2019 – ~Feb 2019 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Feb 2019 – ~Mar 2019 · 28 days · monthly snapshot~Mar 2019 – ~Apr 2019 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Apr 2019 – ~May 2019 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~May 2019 – ~Jun 2019 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jun 2019 – ~Aug 2019 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Aug 2019 – ~Sep 2019 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Sep 2019 – ~Oct 2019 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Oct 2019 – ~Nov 2019 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Nov 2019 – ~Dec 2019 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Dec 2019 – ~Jan 2020 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jan 2020 – ~Jul 2020 · 6 months · monthly snapshot~Jul 2020 – ~Oct 2020 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Oct 2020 – ~Dec 2020 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Dec 2020 – ~Jan 2021 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jan 2021 – ~Feb 2021 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Feb 2021 – ~Mar 2021 · 28 days · monthly snapshot~Mar 2021 – ~May 2021 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~May 2021 – ~Jun 2021 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jun 2021 – ~Sep 2021 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Sep 2021 – ~Jan 2022 · 4 months · monthly snapshot~Jan 2022 – ~Apr 2022 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Apr 2022 – ~May 2022 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~May 2022 – ~Jul 2022 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Jul 2022 – ~Sep 2022 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Sep 2022 – ~Dec 2022 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Dec 2022 – ~Jan 2023 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jan 2023 – ~Feb 2023 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Feb 2023 – ~Dec 2023 · 10 months · monthly snapshot~Dec 2023 – ~Jan 2024 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Jan 2024 – ~Feb 2024 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Feb 2024 – ~Mar 2024 · 29 days · monthly snapshot~Mar 2024 – ~Jun 2024 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Jun 2024 – ~Jul 2024 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Sep 2024 – ~Oct 2024 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Oct 2024 – ~Jan 2025 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Jan 2025 – ~Mar 2025 · 59 days · monthly snapshot~Mar 2025 – ~Apr 2025 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Apr 2025 – ~Jul 2025 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Jul 2025 – ~Sep 2025 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Sep 2025 – ~Oct 2025 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Oct 2025 – ~Nov 2025 · 31 days · monthly snapshot~Nov 2025 – ~Dec 2025 · 30 days · monthly snapshot~Dec 2025 – ~Mar 2026 · 3 months · monthly snapshot~Mar 2026 – ~May 2026 · 2 months · monthly snapshotMay 4, 2026 – present · 47 days · daily API

Change History

57 versions recorded
  1. May 4, 2026 — Present [daily]

    Active Not Recruiting

    Phase: PHASE2None

  2. Mar 2026 — May 2026 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  3. Dec 2025 — Mar 2026 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  4. Nov 2025 — Dec 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  5. Oct 2025 — Nov 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

Show 52 earlier versions
  1. Sep 2025 — Oct 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  2. Jul 2025 — Sep 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  3. Apr 2025 — Jul 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  4. Mar 2025 — Apr 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  5. Jan 2025 — Mar 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  6. Oct 2024 — Jan 2025 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  7. Sep 2024 — Oct 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  8. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  9. Jun 2024 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  10. Mar 2024 — Jun 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  11. Feb 2024 — Mar 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  12. Jan 2024 — Feb 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  13. Dec 2023 — Jan 2024 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  14. Feb 2023 — Dec 2023 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  15. Jan 2023 — Feb 2023 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  16. Dec 2022 — Jan 2023 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  17. Sep 2022 — Dec 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  18. Jul 2022 — Sep 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  19. May 2022 — Jul 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  20. Apr 2022 — May 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  21. Jan 2022 — Apr 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  22. Sep 2021 — Jan 2022 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  23. Jun 2021 — Sep 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  24. May 2021 — Jun 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  25. Mar 2021 — May 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  26. Feb 2021 — Mar 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  27. Jan 2021 — Feb 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  28. Dec 2020 — Jan 2021 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  29. Oct 2020 — Dec 2020 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  30. Jul 2020 — Oct 2020 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  31. Jan 2020 — Jul 2020 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  32. Dec 2019 — Jan 2020 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  33. Nov 2019 — Dec 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  34. Oct 2019 — Nov 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  35. Sep 2019 — Oct 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  36. Aug 2019 — Sep 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  37. Jun 2019 — Aug 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  38. May 2019 — Jun 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  39. Apr 2019 — May 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  40. Mar 2019 — Apr 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  41. Feb 2019 — Mar 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  42. Jan 2019 — Feb 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  43. Oct 2018 — Jan 2019 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  44. Aug 2018 — Oct 2018 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  45. Jul 2018 — Aug 2018 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  46. Jun 2018 — Jul 2018 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  47. Feb 2018 — Jun 2018 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  48. Dec 2017 — Feb 2018 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  49. Jun 2017 — Dec 2017 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  50. May 2017 — Jun 2017 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  51. Feb 2017 — May 2017 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

  52. Jan 2017 — Feb 2017 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE2

    First recorded

Sep 2013

Trial started

Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot

Eligibility Summary

This randomized phase II trial studies how well pazopanib hydrochloride works in treating patients with carcinoid tumors that are growing, spreading, or getting worse. Pazopanib hydrochloride may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Data source: ClinicalTrials.gov

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .