Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Suspended
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT01083966 |
Other study ID # |
0912010765 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Suspended |
Phase |
Phase 1
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 2011 |
Est. completion date |
January 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2024 |
Source |
Northwell Health |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
A recent study by Plotkin et al. showed that bevacizumab (Avastin) treatment was followed by
clinically meaningful hearing improvement, tumor-volume reduction, or both in some, but not
all, patients with Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) who were at risk for complete hearing loss or
brain-stem compression from growing VS. Because of the promising results in preliminary
studies of Bevacizumab and because of significant experience with the safety of the dosages
proposed in this study, this study will offer a safe treatment for patients with VS.
Therefore, this phase I clinical research trial will test the hypothesis that Bevacizumab can
be safely used by direct intracranial superselective intraarterial infusion up to a dose of
10mg/kg to ultimately enhance survival and hearing function of patients with VS.
Description:
Newer techniques in interventional neuroradiology have allowed for a more selective delivery
of catheters higher up into the arterial tree where agents such as chemotherapies, can be
delivered without the risk of adverse affects such as blindness. In fact, studies here at
Cornell have developed very new and exciting super selective intraarterial delivery treatment
for Retinoblastoma and Malignant Glioma brain tumors with little toxicity. Therefore, this
trial will ask one simple question: Is it safe to deliver a first dose of Avastin
intraarterially using these super selective delivery techniques instead of the standard
intravenous route of administration? This should not only increase the amount of drug that
gets to the VS but also spare them of any adverse effects from a less selective delivery.
During that single dose of intraarterial Avastin, they will also receive a dose of mannitol
that opens up the blood brain barrier to improve delivery of the agent to the tumor. After
that single dose of Mannitol and Avastin intraarterially, the patient will be evaluated for 4
weeks to assess for toxicity. If no toxicity, then the will go on and get MRI of the brain
every two months to assess for response up to 12 months. After this, the subject is done with
the "experimental" aspects of the protocol. This is a Phase I trial that is designed to test
the safety of the single dose intraarterial delivery of Avastin and Mannitol,.
To summarize:
Current Standard of Care: Surgery or radiosurgery: IV Avastin
Experimental portion of this proposal:
Day 0: Intraarterial Avastin single dose (starting at 2mg/kg and up to 10mg/kg) after
Mannitol to open the blood brain barrier Day 28 (and every two months thereafter): MRI brain
with contrast
Therefore the experimental aspects of this treatment plan will include:
1. Subjects will first be treated with Mannitol prior to chemotherapy infusion (Mannitol
25%; 3-10 mL/s for 30seconds) in order to disrupt the blood brain barrier. This
technique has been used in several thousand patients in previous studies for the IA
delivery of chemotherapy for malignant glioma.
2. To add a single intraarterial delivery (SIACI) of the Avastin with VS.
3. The dose escalation algorithm is as follows: We will use a single intracranial
superselective intraarterial infusion of Avastin, starting at a dose of 2mg/kg in the
first three patients. Assuming no dose limiting toxicity during the first 28 days after
IA infusion, an MRI of the brain will be performed. The doses will be escalated to 4,6,8
and finally 10mg/kg in this Phase I trial.
Inclusion criteria Include: Males or females, >=18 years of age, with documented Radiologic
or histologic diagnosis of VS
Both hematologic and non-hematologic toxicity will be determined and scored according to the
NCI Common Toxicity Criteria (version 3.0). Monitoring will be conducted by post procedure
history, neurological and physical examinations together with serial blood counts,
prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin time (PTT) and chemistries.
Response will be evaluated after 4 weeks via a MRI with the injection of contrast. The
following will be evaluated every cycle, and then during follow-up: neurological examination,
physical examination, performance status, laboratory parameters and review of adverse
reactions. Contrast enhanced MRI (MRI with gadolinium is the preferable imaging study. The
following subjects will be taken off protocol: those with progressive disease; those who
experience dose-limiting toxicity (DLT). Follow-up will continue until disease progression or
death. Survival will be measured from the time of the first dose of IA AvastinĀ® (given at the
start of each treatment cycle).