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SBRT Followed by PD-1 Inhibitor, Bevacizumab and TAS-102 as Third-Line Therapy for Recurrent/Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

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Summary

NIH's ClinicalTrials.gov has registered a new Phase 2 clinical trial (NCT07535632) at Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University in China. The trial will study stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) combined with sintilimab, bevacizumab, and TAS-102 as third-line therapy for 58 patients with recurrent or metastatic colorectal cancer. The 24-month study has a primary endpoint of progression-free survival.

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What changed

A new clinical trial registration for a Phase 2 study has been added to ClinicalTrials.gov. The trial will enroll 58 participants at Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University in China to evaluate SBRT combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor sintilimab, anti-VEGF antibody bevacizumab, and chemotherapy TAS-102 as third-line treatment for metastatic colorectal cancer. Participants will be randomized 1:1 to experimental or control arms.

This registry entry is informational for compliance purposes. Healthcare providers treating eligible colorectal cancer patients may consider trial referral. Clinical researchers can identify this study for competitive landscape analysis. The trial is registered under NCT07535632 with an expected completion date in 2026.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

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SBRT Followed by PD-1 Inhibitor, Bevacizumab and TAS-102 as Third-Line Therapy for Recurrent/Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Phase 2 NCT07535632 Kind: PHASE2 Apr 17, 2026

Abstract

This phase II trial studies how well stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) followed by a combination of an immune checkpoint inhibitor (sintilimab), bevacizumab, and trifluridine/tipiracil (TAS-102) works as third-line treatment for patients with recurrent or metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) that has progressed after at least two prior lines of systemic therapy.

The study will enroll 58 participants at Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University. Participants will be randomly assigned (1:1) to either the experimental group or the control group. Those in the experimental group will receive SBRT to lung or liver metastases, followed one week later by sintilimab (200 mg every 2 weeks), bevacizumab (5 mg/kg every 2 weeks), and TAS-102 (35 mg/m² twice daily on days 1-5 every 2 weeks). Those in the control group will receive the investigator's choice of standard third-line therapy (such as TAS-102 alone or with bevacizumab, regorafenib, or fruquintinib).

The main purpose is to see whether the new combination extends the time without the cancer growing or spreading (progression-free survival, PFS). Other goals include measuring overall survival, tumor response rates, local control of treated tumors, abscopal (out-of-field) effects, safety, quality of life, and exploring biomarkers that might predict treatment response.

The study is expected to take 24 months to complete (12 months for enrollment and 12 months for follow-up). Results will help determine if adding SBRT and immunothe...

Conditions: Colorectal Neoplasms

Interventions: SBRT, Sintilimab, Bevacizumab, Trifluridine and Tipiracil Tablets, Standard of Care (Investigator Selected)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
NCT07535632

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Patients Clinical investigators
Industry sector
3254 Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Oncology research Immunotherapy study
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Pharmaceuticals Medical Devices

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