Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT03548727

Pseudo-Simultaneous Imaging of Tumor Hypoxia and Proliferation in HNC Patients Using PET/CT

A Pilot Study to Assess the Feasibility of Pseudo-Simultaneous Imaging of Tumor Hypoxia and Proliferation in Head and Neck Cancer Patients Using PET/CT

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
EARLY_Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Weill Medical College of Cornell University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

66% of HNC patients present with advanced-stage disease at initial diagnosis. The 5-year survival rates for stages IVa, IVb, and IVc are 32%, 25%, and \<4% respectively. Accurate pre-treatment staging is vital in determining the optimum procedure for the management of HNC. Early identification of non-responders may allow modification of their treatment through the introduction of more intensive therapies. Identifying prognostic factors that predict patient outcome will ultimately lead to new treatment regimens. Tumor hypoxia and proliferation are two key characteristics of cancer that were shown to correlate with poor response to treatment in HNC. In this proposal, the investigators assess the prognostic values of these two markers. Combining information from these two biological markers shall result in prognostic information superior to those of any of the two separately. Imaging those vital tumor characteristics simultaneously shall provide more coherent assessment of tumor microenvironment than does registration of corresponding images acquired in different imaging session, thus subject to uncertainties resulting from transient biologic changes and image registration process. The investigators propose to use a method that the investigators previously developed to simultaneously and non-invasively image tumor hypoxia (FMISO-PET) and proliferation (FLT-PET) within a single PET/CT study. CT Perfusion scan will be performed 1st, followed by PET imaging with staggered FMISO and FLT injections. FMISO and FLT signals will be separated retrospectively using kinetic modeling. The investigators believe imaging tumor hypoxia and cell proliferation simultaneously yield information underpinning for image-guided and radiobiological based dose painting, adaptive therapy, and patient medical management. If successful, this pilot study will constitute the basis for a NIH grant proposal that aims to improve treatment outcome assessment in HNC.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTPET/CT ImagingPET/CT Imaging of tumor hypoxia and proliferation

Timeline

Start date
2018-11-01
Primary completion
2021-11-30
Completion
2021-11-30
First posted
2018-06-07
Last updated
2021-12-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03548727. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.