Brain Metastases, Adult Clinical Trial
— METREOfficial title:
Multi-paramEtric Imaging to Assess Treatment REsponse After Stereotactic Radiosurgery of Brain Metastases
NCT number | NCT04626206 |
Other study ID # | CCR5331 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | December 2020 |
Est. completion date | August 2021 |
After stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) of brain metastases, patients undergo a standard brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess treatment response 12 weeks after completion of treatment. The interpretation of this standard MRI can sometimes be challenging as it can be difficult to differentiate tumour getting bigger/returning (progression/recurrence) from expected radiotherapy treatment-related changes known as radionecrosis. This study is a pilot brain imaging study that is investigating if readily available forms of imaging such as contrast-clearance analysis MRI (also known as TRAMs) and/or 18 Fluoromethyl-choline positron emission tomography/computerised tomography (18F-choline PET/CT) are equivalent to multi-parametric MRI in their ability to differentiate tumour from radionecrosis. Multi-parametric MRI has the most evidence for its ability to discriminate tumour from radionecrosis but is resource intensive and not routinely available in most centres.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 12 |
Est. completion date | August 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | August 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Patients with brain metastases whose primary cancer originates from the lung and whose histology is that of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) - Patient should have had SRS as their primary treatment for their brain metastases - Follow-up standard brain MRI post-SRS has been discussed in the SRS multi-disciplinary team meeting (MDT) - The changes seen on the post-SRS follow-up standard MRI are deemed unclear by the SRS MDT as to whether they represent tumour progression or radionecrosis. - It is >=12 weeks since completion of SRS Exclusion Criteria: - Prior SRS or external beam radiotherapy to the same area - Children (age < 18) - Pregnant women - Adults that lack capacity to consent - Contraindications to intravenous gadolinium contrast and/or 18F-choline radiotracer - Contraindications to MRI scanning (for example pacemaker ) |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust | National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom |
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* Note: There are 24 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Equivalence of the contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs) and/or 18F-Choline PET/CT to multi-parametric MRI in differentiating tumour progression/recurrence from radionecrosis post stereotactic radiosurgery of brain metastases. | Patients will be classified into two groups according to the result of each scan with either tumour progression/recurrence or radionecrosis (i.e. tumour or no tumour).
Patients will have all three scans within two weeks of each other, and then each imaging technique will be reviewed and reported by neuroradiologists as either disease or no disease. All three scans will be assessed once. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values in detecting tumour and prevalence will be calculated for the two scan methods where multi-parametric MRI will be used as the definitive diagnosis as we consider this as the gold standard in this study. The two scan methods are contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs) and 18F-choline PET/CT classification (tumour or no tumour) which will be compared against multi-parametric MRI. These separate measurements will be aggregated to obtain the primary outcome measurement (equivalence). |
Primary outcome will be measured after the last visit of last patient-about 8 months from first recruited patient. | |
Secondary | Secondary endpoints are exploratory and will focus on correlating quantitative imaging derived parameters from contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs) and 18F-choline PET/CT with quantitative parameters in multi-parametric MRI. | Each imaging technique, multi-parametric MRI (this scan has 3 components), contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs) and 18F-choline PET, measures different quantitative parameters to assess for the presence of tumour. Examples of quantitative parameters include for multi-parametric MRI: relative cerebral blood volume, apparent diffusion coefficient, choline to n-acetylcysteine ratio; contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs): volume of red versus blue areas on the treatment assessment maps; 18F-Choline PET: uptake value of the 18F-choline. These separate measurements will be aggregated to measure a single outcome, outcome 2 which is - is there a correlation between quantitative parameters from TRAMs and 18F-choline PET/CT and multi-parametric MRI. | This can be measured after the last visit of last patient-about 8 months from first recruited patient. | |
Secondary | Correlation of the three scan results with the actual clinical outcomes for the patients-ie tumour or radionecrosis. | Results from the three imaging modalities contrast-clearance analysis MRI (TRAMs), 18F-choline PET/CT, multi-parametric MRI, will be compared with the actual clinical outcomes for the patients (i.e. tumour progression/recurrence or radionecrosis) which will be known with more certainty after a period of follow-up of 6 months has elapsed following the study imaging investigations. This follow-up involves collecting routine standard brain MRI scan results (reports and/or images) and clinical review letters from the primary team.
The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values in detecting tumour and prevalence for the three scan methods will be compared against actual clinical outcomes. These separate measurements will be aggregated to measure outcome 3, which is - is there a correlation between the three scans and actual clinical outcomes for the patient. |
Analysed only after a follow-up period of at least 6 months for all patients post completion of study investigations-about 14 months from first recruited patient and 6 months from last recruited patient. |
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