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CompletedNCT02980679

A Study to Compare the Safety and Imaging Pattern of Cyclotron-produced Technetium (CTC) vs. Generator-produced Technetium (G-PERT) in People With Thyroid Disorders Who Need Surgery

A Pivotal Phase III Study of Cyclotron-produced Tc-99m Pertechnetate (CTC) Compared to Generator-produced Tc-99m Pertechnetate (G-PERT) in Subjects With Thyroid Disorders

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Alberta · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 79 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A 99mTc Pertechnetate (G-PERT) scan is a nuclear medicine test that can create an image of the thyroid gland and other organs. G-PERT is approved by Health Canada for the direct imaging and measurement of thyroid uptake. Doctors and researchers at the University of Alberta have developed a new method of producing 99mTc Pertechnetate (called CTC). It is made in a cyclotron at the Medical Isotope and Cyclotron Facility (MICF) at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta. This new production method will provide another source of 99mTc Pertechnetate. The aim of this study is to confirm that CTC is safe and can be used interchangeably with G-PERT.

Detailed description

The clinical trial will be a Phase III, prospective, crossover, image interpretation blinded, single site study. All subjects will receive Tc-99m pertechnetate (one CTC and one G-PERT administration separated by at least 48 hours) and subsequently be imaged for thyroid uptake and whole body biodistribution. The order of the scans will be randomized. The thyroid image will be interpreted for uptake / no uptake in the thyroid, and the whole body biodistribution image will be interpreted for uptake / no uptake in selected anatomical sites. Interpretation of thyroid imaging results will be compared with other clinical findings (such as pre-surgical ultrasound, fine needle aspirate, and post-surgical pathology results, when available). All imaging assessments will be conducted by 1 blinded Nuclear Medicine physician. A safety evaluation will be conducted on all subjects receiving CTC, consisting of vital signs, haematology and SMA-12 serum biochemistry profile (pre-injection and post-imaging), and, for both CTC and G-PERT, an adverse event assessment (until the subject leaves the Nuclear Medicine department) after each administration.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCTCAfter injection of CTC, a whole body and thyroid scan will be performed.
DRUGG-PERTAfter injection of G-PERT, a whole body and thyroid scan will be performed.

Timeline

Start date
2017-03-03
Primary completion
2019-02-25
Completion
2019-02-25
First posted
2016-12-02
Last updated
2022-04-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02980679. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.