Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05167669

Pain Relief in Symptomatic Bone Metastases With Adjuvant Hyperthermia MR Guided HIFU

Pain Relief in Patients With Symptomatic Bone Metastases: a Feasibility Pilot Study on Palliative Radiotherapy With Adjuvant Hyperthermia by Magnetic Resonance-guided Focused Ultrasound

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (actual)
Sponsor
Sana Boudabbous · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Metastatic disease to the bone is a common cause of pain. External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) is the standard palliative treatment BUT pain improvement is observed in 60% to 80%. Combination of hyperthermia (HT) with radiation is strongly compelling. MR is providing accurate, tissue-independent thermometry for intra-procedural guidance of thermal therapy. In this project we aim to combine in an adjuvant setting mild hyperthermia to EBRT for sustained relief of pain in patients with symptomatic bone metastases.

Detailed description

Metastatic disease to the bone is a common cause of pain and other significant symptoms with a detrimental impact into quality of life. Up to 85% of the patients dying from breast, prostate, or lung cancer present bone metastases. External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) is one of the standard palliative treatment modalities effective in palliating painful bone metastases. Using patient-based evaluation method, pain improvement is observed in 60% to 80% of the patients, with 15% to 40% complete pain relief. Combination of hyperthermia (HT) with radiation is strongly compelling as it is based on principles of classic radiobiology, molecular biology, and tumor physiology. Elevating temperature to a supra-physiological level (between 41° and 43°) shows a complementary action when combined with RT with regard to cell killing. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is commonly used in clinical routine for radiological diagnostic and staging. Moreover, MR is providing accurate, tissue-independent thermometry for intra-procedural guidance of thermal therapy. In this project we aim to combine in an adjuvant setting mild hyperthermia to EBRT for sustained relief of pain in patients with symptomatic bone metastases. Ex vivo studies for the adaptation of existing MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) device were already conducted at University Hospitals of Geneva to the current application demonstrating the high accuracy of the technique for mild hyperthermia treatments. A clinical prospective, interventional, single-center pilot feasibility study will be conducted to assess the clinical application of this technique. Primary objective 1. Accurate control of spatio-temporal pixel-wise MR thermometry (several hundred pixels): spatial homogeneity of temperature elevation within the tumour and inter-patient reproducibility (expected standard deviation of 0.5°C). 2. Safety and patient tolerance: no adverse effects in surrounding bone and soft tissues, compliance with one-day dual treatment during the first month. Secondary objectives 1. Complete pain response at 28 days after EBRT + HT based on the International Bone Metastases Consensus Endpoint definition. 2. Pain assessment for the worst pain related to the treated lesion using the Brief Pain Inventory score at baseline, at day 1, day 7, and 28 days after treatment after EBRT + hyperthermia. 3. Health-related quality of life evaluated using self-administered EORTC QLQ-C15-PAL and EORTC QLQ-BM22 (bone metastases module) questionnaires at baseline, day 7, and day 28 after EBRT + hyperthermia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHIFU-MRI guidedHIFU application under MRI guiding to deliver hypothermia to eligible bone metastases before clinical indicated radiotherapy

Timeline

Start date
2022-10-01
Primary completion
2024-12-31
Completion
2025-01-01
First posted
2021-12-22
Last updated
2025-04-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05167669. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.