Feasibility of Total Neoadjuvant Treatment With HYPErthermia in Patients With High-risk Extremity and Trunk Soft Tissue Sarcoma (TNT-HYPE). A Multicenter, Single Arm, Open Label, Phase II Trial
Soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) are rare cancers with a 5-year survival rate of 60%, and there is no standard treatment for high-risk extremity and trunk STSs (eSTS). A phase III trial suggests that adding moderate regional hyperthermia (HT) to anthracycline-based chemotherapy, followed by surgery and radiotherapy (RT), can improve 10-year overall survival by 10%. This trial aims to optimize treatment by combining the most effective regimens from chemotherapy, HT, RT, and surgery, and will evaluate the feasibility of this new total neoadjuvant treatment (TNT) approach.
• Histologically confirmed primary high-risk Soft tissue sarcoma (STS) of extremity or trunk.
• High-risk according to the prognostic Sarculator tool: 10-year OS probability \< 60%5.
• Resectable tumor: resectability is based on pre-operative imaging and has to be defined by the local treating sarcoma team. A patient is not considered resectable when the expectation is that only a R2 resection is feasible.
• Measurable disease per RECIST v1.1.
• Diagnostic biopsy is available for the central pathology review.
• Candidate for chemotherapy regimen according to protocol.
• Candidate for loco-regional HT.
• Adequate bone marrow function, hepatic function, renal function, cardiac function and coagulation function.