This study focuses on people who have gastric cancer that has spread to the abdominal cavity. Researchers aim to determine whether they can lower the chance that the patient’s gastric cancer grows or spreads by administering paclitaxel chemotherapy directly into the abdominal cavity, in addition to chemotherapy given through a vein in the arm. Paclitaxel is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a chemotherapy medication for use in gastric cancer. The study has 2 groups. Group 1 will receive chemotherapy, and treatments may be given through a vein in the arm and/or orally. Group 2 will receive paclitaxel through the intraperitoneal port (a small device that is placed under the skin of the upper abdomen and a tube that is placed into the abdomen) and chemotherapy through a vein in the arm. Participants in both groups may also receive immunotherapy or targeted treatments. To qualify, the patient needs to have completed 3–6 months of initial gastric cancer treatment.
What is the full name of this clinical trial?
EA2234: A Randomized Phase II/III Trial of Intraperitoneal Paclitaxel Plus Systemic Treatment vs Systemic Treatment Alone in Gastric Carcinomatosis STOPGAP II