Radiotherapy Clinical Trial
Official title:
SAINT: Single frActIoN eighT Gray Palliative Radiotherapy With Modulated Intensity for Pain Reduction: a Single Arm Cohort Analysis
Non-randomized, monocentric, observational study to evaluate the response in terms of reduction of painful symptoms from bone metastases to radiotherapy with high personalization of treatment: performed with modern technology, supplied with modulated intensity technique with concomitant integrated boost, according to selection of patients in accordance with prognosis determined by specific prognostic score
Palliative antalgic oncological treatments concern a chronically-evolving disease patient
with pain control problems, and are a complex problem from different points of view:
logistic, clinical and scientific research. An increasing number of patients are afflicted
due to the increased incidence of cancer in all its phases and the potential chronicity of
the disease linked to new therapies.
The use of palliative anti-radiation radiotherapy treatments involves up to 40% of patients
in a Radiotherapy Center. Radiotherapy was used in the palliative treatment of symptomatic
bone metastases to improve quality of life (QoL) of these patients. This is the easiest way
to respond to problems of home care or long-term care (eg: Hospice). This need is
particularly accentuated for patients with a more severe situation. To reduce the overall
duration of the treatment, it is necessary to manage hypofractionated regulators (ie with
dose fractionation which daily dispense a dose higher than 2Gy). In fact, hypofractionated
regimes concern the gold standard for these clinical presentations.
With the same pain control, multiple fractionation boards report better symptom control over
time and are therefore very often preferred for patients with a prognosis> 6 months. On the
other hand, the treatment regimen with 8 Gy in single therapy session is suggested as
preferable for patients with a worse prognosis (ie less than 6 months of life expectancy).
Evidence from literature suggests that palliative radiation therapy is effective in
controlling pain even in the last weeks of the patient's life and therefore useful to improve
the conditions of patients with a more severe prognosis.
The identification of patients with the worst prognosis to which single-agent radiotherapy is
reserved is another crucial aspect. Unfortunately, although clinically validated in
scientific trials, the routine use of prognostic scores is rarely used in everyday clinical
practice to characterize life expectancy and define the most appropriate treatment regimen.
This aspect limits the effective personalization of palliative treatments of this type.
Furthermore, the indications available in the literature do not specify a univocally shared
standard of technical approach to radiant treatment. The Consensus Conference whose data have
been reported by Chow et al. considers as potentially applicable both non-conformed
techniques (e.g .: single back beam) and the most modern conformational techniques. The less
conformed techniques have the defect of distributing in a more variable way the dose inside
the target to irradiate and to save less well the organs at risk (OAR) with consequent
increase of the risk of toxicity that could reduce the beneficial to the patient given by the
reduction of pain from metastases.
Finally, the prescription of the single 8 Gy radiotherapy session in daily practice is still
not sufficiently widespread, as evidenced by international literature . Due to the peculiar
characteristics of the patients who need these treatments, scientific research aimed at
optimizing these therapies is a need for assistance and even ethics.
This particular analysis, within the Umbrella Protocol, focuses on patients with
uncomplicated and painful vertebral bone metastases, and is aimed at observing and recording
the efficacy of treatment in a single 8 Gy session, applied in good clinical practice.
according to available evidence.
Particular attention is paid to applying a high degree of personalization of the treatment
and a modern approach to the technology of performing the radiant treatment. The
personalization of the treatment will be favored by the routine use of: i) a valid prognostic
score for the expected survival, the Mizumoto prognostic Score (Mizumoto M, 2008), to
identify patients with the worst prognosis to offer treatment in a single session. The use of
the most advanced radiation dose administration technologies will be applied by choosing (in
the spectrum of technologies applicable to these clinical presentations) the most modern
modulated intensity radiotherapy (IMRT). IMRT allows to reduce the dose administered to the
OAR and to concentrate the areas with the highest dose concentration (the so-called "hot
spots") only within the evidence of disease (or "Gross tumor Volume" - GTV). Through the
integrated simultaneous boost (SIB) method in IMRT, it is possible, in fact, to check the
extent and location of the "hot zones" by specifying, through precise prescription, the
maximum desired amount and the topographic limits to the inside of the target prescribed at
the dose of 8 Gy, however doing "drop" the dose to the surrounding OAR.
The hypothesis of the study is to observe the rates of pain control and the need to retract
the patient, when applied to personalization of indications and maximum technological
support. These results could be a basis of scientific evidence to further support the
clinical orientation towards the use of the single fraction of radiotherapy with consequent
improvement in the quality of life of these patients. Furthermore, such data will be able to
feed further analyzes aimed at the cost / effectiveness of this approach.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT03212742 -
Phase I/IIa Study of Concomitant Radiotherapy With Olaparib and Temozolomide in Unresectable High Grade Gliomas Patients
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06190782 -
Local Therapy for Oligometastatic ESCC Patients Treated With PD-1 Inhibitor
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06120127 -
Postoperative Chemotherapy With/Without Radiotherapy and Immunotherapy for Colorectal Liver Metastases With High Risk of Locally Recurrence
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05176002 -
Camrelizumab in Combination With Radiotherapy for Neoadjuvant Esophageal Carcinoma.
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05909137 -
Omitting Clinical Target Volume in Radical Treatment of Unresectable Stage III Non-small Cell Lung Cancer
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT02661152 -
DAHANCA 30: A Randomized Non-inferiority Trial of Hypoxia-profile Guided Hypoxic Modification of Radiotherapy of HNSCC.
|
Phase 3 | |
Withdrawn |
NCT02542137 -
Abscopal Effect for Metastatic Small Cell Lung Cancer
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT01212731 -
Skull Base and Low Grade Glioma Neurocognitive Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Study
|
||
Completed |
NCT01168479 -
FLAME: Investigate the Benefit of a Focal Lesion Ablative Microboost in Prostate Cancer
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT03658343 -
T2* MRI Analysis for Sarcoma
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03280719 -
Whole Breast + Lymph Node Irradiation: Prone Compared to Supine Position in 15 or 5 Fractions
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05515796 -
Multi-omics Sequencing in Neoadjuvant Immunotherapy of Gastrointestinal Tumors
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05514327 -
A Study of Ultra-fraction Radiotherapy Bridging CART in R/R DLBCL
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04453826 -
Concurrent and Adjuvant PD1 Treatment Combined With Chemo-radiotherapy for High-risk Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT03370926 -
FET-PET and Multiparametric MRI for High-grade Glioma Patients Undergoing Radiotherapy
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03870919 -
Locoregional Treatment and Palbociclib in de Novo, Treatment Naive, Stage IV ER+, HER2- Breast Cancer Patients
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02428049 -
Radiation Pneumonitis After SBRT for NSCLC
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04923620 -
Neoadjuvant Cetuximab + Chemotherapy Combined With Short-course Radiotherapy
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05371795 -
Comparison on Radiotherapy Permanent Skin Marking With Lancets and an Electric Marking Device
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03210428 -
Quantitative MR Imaging in Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer
|