Clinical Trials Logo

Radiation Necrosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Radiation Necrosis.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05762172 Recruiting - Brain Metastases Clinical Trials

Dynamic F-DOPA PET for Differential Diagnosis Between Recurrence and Radionecrosis of Brain Metastasis

DYNDOPATEP
Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging is the most widely used examination for detecting the presence of brain metastasis. Functional sequences such as perfusion weighted imaging makes it possible to differentiate tumor recurrence from cerebral radionecrosis. However, this imaging technique may exhibit limitations, especially for brain lesions consisting of a mixture of necrotic tissue and tumor progression or depending on the location of the lesion in the brain. The use of 18F-DOPA PET is another option available to oncologists. Many studies on gliomas showed the superiority of this imaging technique over contrast-enhanced MRI. However, this imaging solution has been very poorly studied for brain metastases. The new PET technology equiped with silicon detectors makes it possible to obtain greater sensitivities than those of previous generations. It also make possible to obtain images in very short acquisition times. After injection, the hardware allows to obtain the perfusion kinetics of the lesion thanks to a very short temporal sampling (i.e. three seconds). The main objective of this pilot study is to evaluate the association between early activity measurements (< 4 minutes post-injection) of 18F-FDOPA in PET and the differential diagnosis between radionecrosis and recurrence of cerebral metastases treated by radiotherapy.

NCT ID: NCT05124912 Recruiting - Brain Metastases Clinical Trials

REMASTer: REcurrent Brain Metastases After SRS Trial

Start date: May 10, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Randomized, post-market multi-center study investigating the efficacy of two sets of treatment algorithms in brain metastases (BM) patients at the time of first intervention for radiographic progression after stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), with or without surgery.