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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05957250

[68Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Scan to Improve the Imaging of Pancreatic and Bile Duct Cancer

[68Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 Positron Emission Tomography in Pancreaticobiliary Cancers: a Pharmacokinetics, Repeatability and Diagnostic Accuracy Study

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
63 (estimated)
Sponsor
Amsterdam UMC, location VUmc · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the clinical use of \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET (positron emission tomography)/CT (computed tomography) imaging in patients with pancreatic or bile duct cancer. The study consists of three parts and patients can only participate in one part of the study. The main questions the study aims to answer are: * In part A: What is the best timing and scanprotocol of a \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT scan? * In part B: Are the results of the simplified scan protocol repeatable? * In part C: What is the accuracy of \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT to detect pancreatic cancer and is it able to detect the effect of chemotherapy on pancreatic cancer lesions? Participants in this study will be asked to undergo the following: * In part A: participants will undergo 1 \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT scan and will have 2 venous canullas and 1 arterial cannula placed. * In part B: participants will undergo 2 \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT scans and will have a venous cannula placed for each scan. * In part C: participants will undergo 2 \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT scans and will have a venous cannula placed for each scan.

Detailed description

Pancreaticobiliary cancer patients have a dismal prognosis. Therefore, patient stratification for the proper primary treatment is crucial to prevent unnecessary surgery and opens up the opportunity for novel (multimodal) treatment. Unfortunately, conventional imaging modalities are not sensitive enough to detect small tumor lesions or differentiate between benign and malignant tissue after neoadjuvant therapy. Tumor-specific imaging, using PET/CT imaging, can identify tumor tissue more accurately and therefore can improve lesion detection and patient stratification. Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) shows promise as a target to identify pancreaticobiliary cancers, lymph node metastases, and residual disease after neoadjuvant therapy. The FAP targeted inhibitor (FAPI) is developed to target FAP and has been labelled to the Gallium-68 (68Ga) radioisotope, resulting in the \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 tracer. This study will be a three part monocenter study focusing on the clinical evaluation of \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46. * In part A, the pharmacokinetics of this tracer will be studied and the simplified method(s) to quantify tracer uptake will be validated. * In part B, a test-retest study will be performed to assess the repeatability of these simplified quantitative methods. * In part C, the sensitivity and feasibility of therapy response monitoring will be investigated.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST[68Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CTone or two \[68Ga\]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT scan(s)

Timeline

Start date
2023-02-03
Primary completion
2026-07-01
Completion
2026-07-01
First posted
2023-07-24
Last updated
2023-07-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05957250. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.