Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06361784 |
Other study ID # |
INT216-23 |
Secondary ID |
MFAG27480 |
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 29, 2024 |
Est. completion date |
March 29, 2029 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milano |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The prospective study LOCATION MATTERS aims to investigate the radiation-induced damage to
the heart and the cardiovascular system in patients treated with thoracic radiotherapy.
Patients enrolled in the study will complete a set of extensive measures at the baseline, end
of RT, and 9 months after treatment. Ultrasound exams, CT scans, pulmonary tests and wearable
devices will assess functional and morphological parameters and the association with their
variation and the dose delivered to the heart substructures and to the normal lung.
Description:
A cohort of locally advanced lung cancer patients treated with RT will be enrolled at
Fondazione IRCCS Istituto dei Tumori. Comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors will be
recorded for all the patients. Heart substructures will be automatically contoured on each
patient to provide details on the dose distribution.
The investigators will plan an extensive set of cardiac tests before, at the end of RT and 8
months after treatment (to assess cardiac remodelling and pt recovery). It will include an
electrocardiogram, echo cardio, spirometry, blood circulating biomarkers (Troponin and
Natriuretic peptide tests) and cardiac calcium score from CT. In addition, the researchers
will include a set of measures by the use of a vascular ultrasound machine. This machine will
allow the investigation of subclinical vascular organ damage indicators, including carotid
distention and intima-media thickness (descriptor of the carotid inflammatory state), through
a simultaneous and automatic procedure from raw imaging data. This guarantees the extraction
of highly reproducible and operator-independent features. Finally, the project will provide
smartwatch devices to the patients aiming to get longitudinal information on heart rate,
breathe per minute, stress level, Pulse Ox and recovery time after customised exercises.
The study's aim is to associate the most "radiosensitive" functional parameters or biomarkers
(i.e. the more prone to vary after RT) with the dose delivered to the HSs. First, researchers
will analyze the variations of the parameters in patients with doses above and below the
identified constraints from the literature. Second, investigators will test whether a dose
relationship model can continuously describe the changes for the parameters with
statistically significant differences. The primary focus will be the comprehension of the
dose response for morphological and functional parameters that are altered chronically, i.e.
with more compromised values at the 1-year measurement.
For this study, the investigators estimate to enrol 150 lung cancer patients in 3 years.
Information on the OS and MACEs will be registered during the clinical standard FU.
Researchers expect to fulfil an FU rate of 90% two years after RT completion. Registering
MACEs during the FU time will allow to perform a first direct comparison of the competing
part of Task 1.3.