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A phase II randomized double blinded trial evaluating the efficacy of curcumin with pre-operative chemoradiation for rectal cancer
Authors:Jillian R. Gunther  Awalpreet S. Chadha  Sushovan Guha  Gottumukkala S. Raju  Dipen M. Maru  Mark F. Munsell  Yan Jiang  Peiying Yang  Edd Felix  Marilyn Clemons  Geena George Mathew  Pankaj K. Singh  John M. Skibber  Miguel A. Rodriguez-Bigas  George J. Chang  Cathy Eng  Marc E. Delclos  Christopher H. Crane  Prajnan Das  Sunil Krishnan
Abstract:BackgroundIn vivo studies demonstrate that curcumin increases radioresponse of colorectal cancers. To demonstrate efficacy in humans, we performed a randomized double-blind study of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) patients receiving pre-operative chemoradiation therapy (CRT) ± curcumin. We used pathologic complete response (pCR) rate as a surrogate for clinical outcome.MethodsFrom 2008–2010, LARC patients were randomized to placebo/curcumin in a 1:2 ratio. Patients received CRT [50.4 gray in 28 fractions; capecitabine (825 mg/m2 twice daily)] followed by surgery. Curcumin (4 grams orally, twice daily) or placebo was given throughout CRT and 6 weeks afterward. Toxicity was monitored weekly. Blood samples taken pre- and 1-hour post-ingestion and tissue biopsies (both collected at CRT week 2) were analyzed for pharmacokinetics. The primary outcome was surgical pCR rate.ResultsOf 22 enrolled patients, 15 received curcumin. Median age was 61 years and the majority were male (n=13; 59%). The median serum curcumin concentrations before (3.04 ng/mL; range, 1.24–18.88 ng/mL) and 1 hour after (3.32 ng/mL; range, 0.84–5.36 ng/mL) curcumin intake did not differ significantly (P=0.33). Serum curcumin concentrations both increased and decreased 1-hour post-administration (range as percentage of baseline: 8.8–258.1%). Twelve curcumin patient tissue biopsies had median curcumin concentration of 33.7 ng/mg tissue (range, 0.1–4,765.7 ng/mg). Two placebo and 1 curcumin patient achieved pCRs (P=0.18). One grade 3 toxicity (infection) was experienced.ConclusionsThe addition of curcumin to CRT did not increase pCR rates for LARC patients. The unpredictable bioavailability of curcumin contributes to continued uncertainties regarding curcumin efficacy.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00745134.
Keywords:Locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC)   chemoradiation   curcumin
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