Actively Recruiting
The Safety and Efficacy of Cetuximab Beta Plus Fruquintinib With or Without Immune Checkpoint Inhibitorrs in First-line Treatment of RAS/BRAF Wild Type Unresectable Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Led by Zhejiang University · Updated on 2025-12-02
70
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
114 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Colorectal cancer is a malignant tumor ranking among the top four in incidence and the top three in causes of death globally . Chemotherapy combined with anti-EGFR or anti-VEGF monoclonal antibodies is currently the standard first-line treatment for advanced pMMR colorectal cancer. The inclusion of anti-EGFR or anti-VEGF targeted therapies has improved the overall survival of advanced colorectal cancer patients from 13 months in the era of fluorouracil monotherapy to the current 30 months. However, many patients refuse chemotherapy or cannot tolerate cytotoxic chemotherapeutic drugs, which often leads to poor prognosis in advanced colorectal cancer. Thus, in the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer, is it possible to achieve antitumor activity through the combination of targeted drugs while avoiding chemotherapy? Early clinical studies evaluated the possibility of combining anti-EGFR and anti-VEGF monoclonal antibodies. Subsequent large-scale Phase III clinical studies, such as PACCE , indicated that the combination of FOLFOX or FOLFIRI regimens with bevacizumab and panitumumab increased adverse reactions without providing survival benefits in the overall colorectal cancer population compared to the control group. Following this, the CAIRO2 clinical study added cetuximab to CapeOX combined with bevacizumab and still did not demonstrate survival benefits in the first-line treatment of advanced colorectal cancer, particularly in patients with RAS mutations. However, subgroup analyses suggested a certain survival advantage in patients with wild-type RAS who received combined targeted therapy. A recent clinical study (ECOG-ACRIN E7208) showed that in patients with KRAS wild-type advanced colorectal cancer, second-line use of irinotecan combined with cetuximab and ramucirumab significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) and disease control rate (DCR) compared to cetuximab combined with irinotecan. These studies suggest that combining anti-EGFR and anti-VEGF monoclonal antibodies is a feasible approach for patients with wild-type RAS Certainly, in terms of anti-VEGF options, besides macromolecular anti-VEGFR monoclonal antibodies, small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors targeting VEGF have also demonstrated significant antitumor activity in colorectal cancer. Studies have shown that fruquintinib significantly prolongs the survival of patients with advanced colorectal cancer, leading to its approval as a third-line treatment for colorectal cancer. On the other hand, immunotherapy targeting PD-1 and CTLA-4 has recently made significant progress in the treatment of colorectal cancer. For the pMMR type, which accounts for over 90% of advanced colorectal cancer cases, related clinical studies have confirmed that the combination of immunotherapy and targeted therapy has significant antitumor synergistic effects. These studies also indicate that immune checkpoint inhibitors can enhance the antitumor activity of anti-EGFR and anti-VEGF targeted therapies in pMMR advanced colorectal cancer. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cetuximab combined with fruquintinib, with or without immune checkpoint inhibitors, as a first-line treatment for pMMR, RAS/BRAF wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
The Safety and Efficacy of Cetuximab Beta Plus Fruquintinib With or Without Immune Checkpoint Inhibitorrs in First-line Treatment of RAS/BRAF Wild Type Unresectable Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Participants aged 10 to 80 years; those aged 80 to 85 may enroll after comprehensive assessment
- ECOG performance status score of 0 or 1
- Histologically or cytologically confirmed colorectal adenocarcinoma with unresectable metastases
- At least one measurable lesion according to RECIST 1.1 criteria
- Adequate major organ function including blood counts, liver and kidney function, coagulation, and thyroid function
- Left ventricular ejection fraction of at least 50% by echocardiogram
- Negative hepatitis B surface antigen or controlled hepatitis B viral load if positive
- Negative hepatitis C antibody or RNA; controlled liver enzyme levels if RNA positive
- Female patients must be postmenopausal, surgically sterilized, or use effective contraception and have a negative pregnancy test
- Male patients must agree to abstinence or use contraception when their partner is of childbearing potential
You will not qualify if you...
- Presence of MSI-H/dMMR colorectal cancer
- Other active malignancies within 3 years except cured cervical carcinoma in situ, non-melanoma skin cancer, or superficial bladder tumors
- Conditions affecting oral medication such as inability to swallow or chronic diarrhea
- Recent gastrointestinal bleeding, perforation, or active inflammatory bowel disease
- Uncontrolled pleural, pericardial effusion, or ascites requiring drainage
- Unresolved toxicities from prior cancer treatments exceeding grade 1 (except certain neuropathies)
- Recent major surgery or significant injury within 28 days before treatment
- Active bleeding events or unhealed wounds within specified recent timeframes
- Recent arterial or venous thrombotic events within 6 months
- History of psychoactive drug abuse
- Severe uncontrolled diseases including uncontrolled hypertension, serious heart conditions, severe infections, liver cirrhosis, renal failure needing dialysis, immunodeficiency, poorly controlled diabetes, significant proteinuria, neurological or psychiatric disorders requiring treatment
- Active or suspected autoimmune diseases, except certain controlled conditions
- Recent live vaccine receipt within 28 days
- Use of systemic glucocorticoids or immunosuppressives within 14 days prior to enrollment
- Participation in another clinical study within 14 days prior
- History of severe allergy to monoclonal antibodies
- Recent anticancer therapies within 4 weeks before study treatment
- Prior postoperative anti-angiogenic targeted therapies
- Symptomatic or recently controlled brain metastases
- Other conditions deemed unsafe or unsuitable by the investigator
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Second Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University College of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province 310999
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
K
Kefeng Ding, PhD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
3
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