Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT01799044 |
Other study ID # |
NL 41089.029.12 COLDFIRE |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 1
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 2012 |
Est. completion date |
September 2013 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2022 |
Source |
Amsterdam UMC, location VUmc |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Irreversible electroporation is a new, minimal-invasive image-guided treatment to treat
tumors near or around vulnerable structures, such as central liver tumors.
To investigate the safety and efficacy of IRE in the treatment of colorectal liver
metastases, patients with resectable colorectal liver metastases undergo IRE and resection of
the metastases in the same session. After resection, the specimen is examined macroscopically
to determine vitality using a specific vitality staining (triphenyl-tetrazoliumchloride) and
to visualize the exact ablation zone. Subsequently, histopathologic examination is used to
determine type of cell death and the microscopic ablation zone.
The investigators hypothesize that IRE is a safe effective method to treat colorectal liver
metastasis and that cell damage and cell death is demonstrated as soon as 1 hour after the
procedure.
Description:
This pilot-study is designed to determine the safety of IRE using the NanoKnife on colorectal
liver metastases. Secondary, feasibility, histological effect on the ablated cells and exact
shape and size of the ablated area will be determined.
Study design:
Patients with resectable CRLM (1 lesion or more) undergoing surgical resection of the
metastases will receive study information to participate in this pilot-study. Limited
extrahepatic disease is not contra-indicated.
Patients will undergo a general pre-procedural work-up: total body FDG PET-CT, ceCT of the
abdomen, anesthetic review with special attention to cardiac history, baseline full blood
examination, urea and electrolytes, renal function tests, liver enzymes and coagulation
profile test.
The procedure is conducted under general anaesthesia with muscle relaxants to prevent patient
motion and epidural analgesia. A laparotomy will be performed at the surgeon's discretion for
optimal liver exposure. Intraoperative ultrasonography (IOUS) will be carried out by an
experienced interventional radiologist for exact evaluation of maximum diameter, number and
location of all lesions and to confirm resectability (if lesions prove not to be resectable,
only RFA will be performed according to standard of care). All lesions will be biopsied. The
electrodes will be placed under ultrasound guidance according to manufacturer's guidelines in
the lesions that are eligible for resection. After correct placement of the electrodes the
lesions will be ablated according to protocol with ECG synchronization and the ablation zone
is determined by US.
During the procedure the cardiac rhythm will be closely monitored and a defibrillator will be
present at all times.
After IOUS confirmation of complete ablation (at least 30 minutes after ablation of the
lesion) the surgeon will perform a partial liver resection / metastasectomy including the
ablated lesions and the surgical procedure is ended as usual. After the treatment of all
lesions with the NanoKnife and before resection (and RFA of unresectable CRLM if indicated),
blood samples will be drawn to determine renal function and liver enzymes since cell
destruction may cause biochemical abnormalities.
The resected specimen will be transported to the department of pathology. After sectioning,
the specimen will be photographed extensively to determine exact shape and size of the
ablated area. One slice is stained in vitality-staining (TTC), to macroscopically distinguish
viable from nonviable tissue.
After formalin fixation, the specimen is stained and examined under light microscopy
according to standard protocol to determine radicality of the resection margins.
Additionally, special attention will be given to indications for cellular damage, vessel wall
damage and size and shape of the ablation zone. Caspase-3 and BAX/BCL-2 analysis will be
performed to investigate the induction of apoptosis. The results will be compared to the
result of the biopsy taken prior to ablation.
On day one and day three post-operatively regular blood samples will be drawn, including
liver enzymes and renal function tests. After discharge, out of hospital follow-up will be
according to liver surgery protocol. The investigators aim to include 10 patients in this
pilot study.
Monitoring:
An independent monitor (quality officer) will monitor all study data according to Good
Clinical Practice (GCP). The informed consent of selected individual participants will be
checked. Source Data verification will be performed during onsite monitoring (to verify if
all data on the Case Report Form are in accordance with the source data). The intensity of
this verification is in relation to the risk associated with the intervention investigated.
Data that by all means will be checked are the informed consent form, in- and exclusion
criteria and the primary outcome. The monitor will also verify if all (S)AE's and SUSAR's are
reported adequately and within the time that is determined by legal rules and regulations.