Brief Summary
This phase III trial studies how well active surveillance help doctors to monitorto check on, keep track of subjects with low riskthe possibility that something bad will happen germ cell tumors for recurrenceto occur or happen again after their tumor is removed. When the germ cell tumor has spread outside of the organ in which it developed, it is considered metastatic. Drugs used in chemotherapya cancer treatment that uses drugs to kill or slow the growth of cancer cells, while minimising damage to healthy cells, such as bleomycin, carboplatin, etoposide, and cisplatin, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cellsthe basic structural and functional unit of all living things, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. The trial studies whether carboplatin or cisplatin is the preferred chemotherapy to use in treating metastatic standard risk germ cell tumors.
Intervention / Treatment
- Other: Best Practice
- Procedure: Biopsyremoval of a section of tissue to analyse for cancer cells
- Procedure: Biospecimen Collection
- Biological: Bleomycin Sulfate
- Drug: Carboplatin
- Drug: Cisplatin
- Procedure: Computed Tomography
- Drug: Etoposide
- Procedure: Magnetic Resonance Imagingtests that create detailed images of areas inside the body
- Other: Pharmacogenomic Study
- Procedure: Pulmonary Function Testa test that examines how well your lungs are working
- Other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- Other: Questionnaire Administration
Inclusion Criteria
- There is no age limit for the low risk stratum (stage I ovarian immature teratoma and stage I non-seminoma or seminoma malignantcancerous, may grow and spread to other areas of the body GCT [all sites])
- Standard risk 1: Patients must be < 11 years of age at enrollment
- Standard risk 2: Patients must be >= 11 and < 25 years of age at enrollment
- Patients enrolling on one of the low risk arms must be newly diagnosed with a stage I germ cell tumor; for the standard risk arms, patients must be newly diagnosed with metastatic germ cell tumor (stage II or higher); histologic confirmation of a primary extracranial germ cell tumor in any of the categories outlined below is required of all patients at enrollment except for those who were initially diagnosed with stage I non-seminoma malignant GCT and later recur during observation post surgerytreatment involving removal of cancerous tissue and/or tumours and a margin of healthy tissue around it to reduce recurrence off study; for these patients, if elevated tumor markers rise to > 5 x upper limit of normal (ULN) on at least 2 measurements taken at least 1 week apart, a diagnostic biopsy is not required for enrollment
- Low risk stage I immature teratoma (IT); site: ovarian; stage: Children’s Oncologythe study, diagnosis and treatment of cancer Group (COG) stage I, Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage IA and IB; gradea description of how abnormal cancer cells and tissue look under a microscope when compared to healthy cells: 2 or 3; histology: pure immature teratoma (may contain microscopic foci of yolk sac tumor), mixed immature and mature teratoma, (no pathological evidence of MGCT); tumor markers: alpha-FP =< 1,000 ng/mL, beta-HCG institutional normal; all ages
- Low risk stage I non-seminoma MGCT; site: ovarian, testicular, or extragonadal; stage: COG stage I, FIGO stage IA and IB, American Joint Committee on Cancera disease where abnormal cells split without control and spread to other nearby body tissue and/or organs (AJCC) testicular stage IA, IB and IS; histology: must contain at least one of the following: yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinomacancer arising from tissues that line organs, or choriocarcinoma (pure or mixed); all ages
- Low risk stage I seminoma-MGCT; site: testicular; stage: COG stage I; AJCC testicular stage IA IB, and IS; histology: may contain immature/mature teratoma; may NOT contain yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma; all ages
- Standard risk 1 (SR1); site: ovarian, testicular, or extragonadal; stage: COG stage II-IV, FIGO stage IC, FIGO stage II-IV (International Germ Cell Consensus Classification [IGCCC] criteria DO NOT apply); histology: must contain at least one of the following: yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma; age (years) < 11
- Standard risk 2 (SR2)
- Site: ovarian; stage: COG stage II and III, FIGO stage IC, II and III; histology: must contain at least one of the following: yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma; age (years) >= 11 and < 25
- Site: testicular; stage: COG stage II-IV, AJCC stage II, III, IGCCC good risk; histology: must contain at least one of the following: yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma; tumor markers: must be IGCCC good risk; post op: alpha-FP < 1,000 ng/mL, beta-HCG < 5,000 IU/mL and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) < 3.0 x normal; age (years) >= 11 and < 25
- Site: extragonadal; stage: COG stage II; histology: must contain at least one of the following: yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma; age (years) >= 11 and < 25
- Notes:
- IGCCC criteria only apply to SR2 patients with a testicular primary tumor
- Use post-op tumor marker levels to determine IGCCC risk group
- Stage 1 seminoma patients are not eligible for the standard risk arms of the study
- For the low risk stage I non-seminoma MGCT and the standard risk arms, components of yolk sac tumor, embryonal carcinoma, or choriocarcinoma can be mixed with other forms of GCT, such as seminoma or mature or immature teratoma; if yolk sac tumor is the only malignant component present, then it must be deemed by the pathologista doctor who specialises in the study and diagnosis of disease through the examination and testing of body tissue to be greater than a “microscopic component” of yolk sac tumor
- Patients must have a performance status corresponding to Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) scores of 0, 1, 2 or 3; use Karnofsky for patients > 16 years of age and Lansky for patients =< 16 years of age
- Organ function requirements apply ONLY to patients who will receive chemotherapy (SR1 and SR2 patients)
- Adequate renal function defined as:
- Creatinine clearance or radioisotope glomerular filtration rate (GFR) >= 70 mL/min/1.73 m^2 (within 7 days prior to enrollment) OR
- A serum creatinine based on age/gender as follows (within 7 days prior to enrollment): (mg/dL)
- 1 month to < 6 months male: 0.4 female: 0.4
- 6 months to < 1 year male: 0.5 female: 0.5
- 1 to < 2 years male: 0.6 female: 0.6
- 2 to < 6 years male: 0.8 female: 0.8
- 6 to < 10 years male: 1 female: 1
- 10 to < 13 years male: 1.2 female: 1.2
- 13 to < 16 years: male: 1.5 female: 1.4
- >= 16 years male: 1.7 female: 1.4
- Total bilirubin =< 1.5 x upper limit of normal (ULN) for age (within 7 days prior to enrollment)
- Serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) (aspartate aminotransferase [AST]) or serum glutamate pyruvate transaminase (SGPT) (alanine aminotransferase [ALT]) < 2.5 x upper limit of normal (ULN) for age (for the purpose of this study, the ULN for SGPT is 45 U/L) (within 7 days prior to enrollment)
- Peripheral absolute neutrophil count (ANC) >= 1,000/mm^3 (within 7 days prior to enrollment) AND
- Platelet count >= 100,000/mm^3 (within 7 days prior to enrollment)
- Patients enrolling on the standard risk arms must be medically fit to receive protocol treatment and with no contraindications to protocol treatment
- Eligibility criteria to participate in the pilot study of the AYA-Hears instrument (patient reported outcomes [PROs] of ototoxicity) Note: participants in group 1 will not receive AGCT1531 protocol-directed therapy; all other AYA-HEARS patients must be enrolled on the AGCT1531 SR2 arm in order to participate
- >= 11 and < 25 years old at enrollment
- Able to fluently speak and read English
- Has received prior cisplatin- or carboplatin-based chemotherapy regimen for malignancy including diagnoses other than germ cell tumor
- Followed for cancer or survivorshipthe ongoing care and support people with cancer receive after cancer diagnosis and treatment care at one of the following institutions:
- Baylor College of Medicine/Dan L Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center
- Dana Farber/Harvard Cancer Center
- Hospital for Sick Children
- Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario
- Oregon Health and Science University
- Seattle Children’s Hospital
- Yale University