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About
This pilot clinical trial studies advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques in measuring treatment response in patients with high-grade glioma. New diagnostic procedures, such as advanced MRI techniques at 3 Tesla, may be more effective than standard MRI in measuring treatment response in patients receiving treatment for high-grade gliomas.
Full description
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To correlate treatment-induced changes in quantitative MRI-based biomarkers-specifically, those sensitive to tumor protein content (amide proton transfer asymmetry [APTasym] from chemical exchange saturation transfer [CEST]), cellularity (apparent diffusion coefficient [ADC] from diffusion-weighted imaging [DWI]), and blood flow (volume transfer constant [K^trans] from dynamic contrast-enhanced [DCE]; cerebral blood flow [CBF] from dynamic susceptibility contrast [DSC])-with treatment-induced changes in tumor size, measured via standard anatomic MRI.
II. To correlate treatment-induced changes in the above quantitative MRI endpoints with patient progression-free survival (PFS).
OUTLINE:
Patients undergo measurement of tumor protein content using CEST-MRI, cellularity using DWI-MRI, and blood flow using DCE-MRI and DSC-MRI within 2 weeks of treatment and at 2 and 4 weeks after initiation of treatment.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients must sign an institutional review board (IRB)-approved informed consent document
Patients must have been diagnosed with high-grade glioma:
As measured by conventional high spatial resolution MRI, the minimum diameter of the primary lesion (short axis) should be at least 5 mm
Patients must be scheduled to receive: 1) standard chemotherapy with/without radiation therapy; OR 2) single-agent bevacizumab (Avastin)
Exclusion criteria
Patients with low-grade (WHO grade I or II) glioma
Patients with metastatic disease
Patients who have any type of bioimplant activated by mechanical, electronic, or magnetic means (e.g., cochlear implants, pacemakers, neurostimulators, biostimulators, electronic infusion pumps, etc), because such devices may be displaced or malfunction
Patients who have any type of ferromagnetic bioimplant that could potentially be displaced
Patients who have cerebral aneurysm clips
Patients who may have shrapnel imbedded in their bodies (such as from war wounds), metal workers and machinists (potential for metallic fragments in or near the eyes)
Patients with inadequate renal function (creatinine >= 1.5 times upper limit of normal) or acute or chronic renal insufficiency (glomerular filtration rate < 20 ml/min)
Patients who are pregnant or breast feeding; urine pregnancy test will be performed on women of child bearing potential
Patients who exhibit noticeable anxiety and/or claustrophobia or who exhibit severe vertigo when they are moved into the magnet bore
Patients incapable of giving informed written consent, for the following reasons:
Inability to adhere to the experimental protocols for any reason
Inability to communicate with the research team
Limited ability to give informed consent due to mental disability, altered mental status, confusion, cognitive impairment, or psychiatric disorders
Prisoners or other individuals deemed to be susceptible to coercion
For patients who have undergone surgical resection prior to joining the study, in whom baseline magnetic resonance (MR) images exhibit enough signal degradation (due to susceptibility artifact in the region of the surgical bed) such that the data are uninterpretable will be excluded
Primary purpose
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7 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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