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Efficacy of Methylene Blue Photodynamic Therapy for Treatment of Deep Tissue Abscesses

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University of Rochester

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Abscess

Treatments

Device: Laser Illumination (patient-specific dose)
Device: Optical Spectroscopy Measurement
Drug: Lipid Emulsion
Device: Insertion of optical fiber
Device: Laser Illumination (pre-defined dose)
Procedure: Standard of care abscess drainage
Drug: Methylene Blue

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06052956
STUDY00008702

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this Phase 2 study is to evaluate the efficacy of methylene blue photodynamic therapy (MB-PDT) performed at the time of percutaneous abscess drainage for disinfection of deep tissue abscesses. The study includes three arms: (1) MB-PDT at a fixed drug/light dose plus standard of care abscess drainage , (2) MB-PDT at a patient-specific dose determined by pre-treatment optical measurements plus standard of care abscess drainage , and (3) standard of care abscess drainage. The primary endpoint is reduction in time to removal of the drainage catheter.

Full description

Abscesses form as a result of the interaction between an acute microbial infection and the host immune system, and generally result in fever, nausea, and acute abdominal pain. If untreated, the mortality rate can be high. Abscesses are routinely managed by image-guided percutaneous drainage and delivery of systemic antibiotics. Despite this standard of care, abscesses remain a significant source of morbidity, mortality, and hospital stay. Further, response can vary widely between patients. Many abscesses also contain antibiotic resistant species.

Photodynamic therapy (PDT), which relies upon the combination of photosensitive dyes known as photosensitizers, excitation by visible light, and molecular oxygen to generate cytotoxic reactive oxygen species, represents a powerful adjunct to standard of care drainage. A Phase 1 clinical trial aimed at assessing the safety and feasibility of methylene blue (MB) PDT at the time of percutaneous abscess drainage (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02240498) was completed. No adverse or serious adverse events were observed, and the procedure was well tolerated by all subjects. Based on these encouraging Phase 1 results, the current study therefore aims to assess efficacy of MB-PDT by quantification of time to removal of the drainage catheter and microbiological analysis of pre- and post-PDT aspirate samples.

This is a single center, randomized, open-label Phase 2 clinical trial, which will be conducted in accordance with the principles of good clinical practice and following approval by both the FDA and local IRB. Patients who have been diagnosed with a drainable abscess, that meet all inclusion/exclusion criteria, and have the approval of their primary care team, will be offered enrollment in the study. Consented subjects will be assigned prospectively to one of three arms: (1) MB-PDT at a fixed drug/light dose plus standard of care abscess drainage, (2) MB-PDT at a patient-specific dose determined by pre-treatment optical measurements plus standard of care abscess drainage, and (3) standard of care abscess drainage alone. The primary endpoint is time to removal of the drainage catheter. The secondary endpoint is reduction in bacterial burden from pre- to post-intervention. Tertiary endpoints include drain output following intervention, resolution of clinical symptoms, abscess recurrence, need for repeated intervention, and cure rate.

All subjects will receive standard of care image-guided percutaneous abscess drainage. This includes collection of a pre-intervention abscess aspirate sample, and placement of a drainage catheter.

For subjects in Arms 1 and 2, sterile methylene blue (MB) will then be administered to the abscess cavity using the same needle/catheter utilized for standard of care drainage. After a 10 minute incubation interval, MB will be aspirated and the cavity flushed with sterile saline.

For subjects in Arm 2, optical spectroscopy measurements will then be made to determine the optical properties of the abscess wall. This will be done by connecting the proximal end of the sterile optical fiber used for treatment illumination to a custom optical spectroscopy system. The distal end of this fiber will be advanced through the same catheter/needle used for the standard of care procedure in order to make gentle contact with the wall of the cavity. Low-intensity white light will be delivered by the fiber, and light that has interacted with the abscess wall will be detected by the same optical fiber. These optical measurements will be averaged and used to extract the absorption and reduced scattering coefficients at the treatment wavelength. These extracted optical properties, along with the subject's segmented pre-procedure CT images, will be used to generate a patient-specific treatment plan that seeks to deliver a desired fluence rate to 95% of the abscess wall, while limiting the portion of the abscess wall that receives a high fluence rate (>400 mW/cm2) to less than 5%.

For subjects in Groups 1 and 2, the cavity will then be filled with sterile 0.1% lipid emulsion solution to gently distend the cavity, and through efficient light scattering, homogenize the light dose to the walls of the cavity. A sterile optical fiber will be advanced to the approximate center of the abscess cavity via the same catheter/needle under image guidance. The proximal end of the fiber is coupled to the output of a diode laser system emitting light at 665 nm.

For subjects in Group 1 (MB-PDT at a fixed dose), laser power will be delivered to the cavity at a constant fluence rate. The laser power required to obtain the desired fluence rate at the wall will be calculated purely based on the abscess size. For subjects in Group 2 (MB-PDT with patient-specific treatment planning), the subject's measured optical properties and their segmented pre-procedure CT images will be integrated with treatment planning software to determine the laser power required to deliver the desired fluence rate to 95% of the abscess wall, while limiting the portion of the abscess wall that receives a fluence rate of >400 mW/cm2 to less than 5%. In both cases, illumination will be delivered for 20 minutes, resulting in a total delivered fluence of 24 J/cm2. Immediately after laser irradiation, the Intralipid solution will be aspirated and the cavity again flushed with sterile saline.

Collection of aspirated abscess material for microbiological assessment is standard of care for percutaneous abscess drainage. A portion of this standard of care collection will be collected by the study team for additional quantitative evaluation. Additionally, a post-intervention aspirate sample will be collected for study purposes.

If successful, this research could result in an adjunct treatment for abscess patients that improves long-term abscess resolution and the rate of response to percutaneous drainage. This clinical strategy would offer a wide range of potential health benefits to patients with deep tissue abscess. Among these advantages are reduced surgical intervention, decreased spread of infection, shortened course of post-treatment antibiotic therapy, and decreased selective pressure for antibiotic resistance. Ultimately, this would promote early recovery, shorten hospital stay, and lead to lower overall health care costs for patients undergoing image-guided percutaneous abscess drainage.

Enrollment

120 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults 18 years or older
  • All patients with clinical symptoms (ex: fever, chills, pain, tachycardia, hypotension), laboratory (leukocytosis) and radiologic findings (thick walled, rim-enhancing collection with gas bubbles or air-fluid levels) compatible with an abscess that requires image- guided percutaneous drainage
  • Approval by the primary care team to pursue PDT and discuss enrollment with the patient

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Lactation
  • Allergy to contrast media, narcotics, sedatives, atropine or eggs
  • Necrotic tissue that requires surgical debridement
  • Severely compromised cardiopulmonary function or hemodynamic instability
  • Thrombocytopenia (<50,000/mm3)
  • Uncorrectable coagulopathy
  • Poor kidney function (serum creatinine >3mg/dl)
  • Lack of a safe pathway to the abscess or fluid collection
  • Unable or unwilling to understand or to provide informed consent
  • Unable or unwilling to undergo study procedures
  • Patient unable to cooperate with, or to be positioned for the procedure
  • Unable to comply with necessary follow up
  • Patients with pancreatic abscesses
  • Patients with known fistulous communication with their abscess
  • Abscess greater than 13 cm in diameter

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

120 participants in 3 patient groups

MB-PDT at pre-defined dose plus standard of care abscess drainage
Experimental group
Description:
Each subject in this arm will receive standard of care abscess drainage, methylene blue, lipid emulsion, and laser illumination at an optical power defined by their abscess size.
Treatment:
Drug: Methylene Blue
Procedure: Standard of care abscess drainage
Device: Laser Illumination (pre-defined dose)
Device: Insertion of optical fiber
Drug: Lipid Emulsion
MB-PDT at patient-specific dose plus standard of care abscess drainage
Experimental group
Description:
Each subject in this arm will receive standard of care abscess drainage, methylene blue, lipid emulsion, optical spectroscopy, and laser illumination. The optical power for laser illumination will be determined by their abscess morphology and the results of optical spectroscopy.
Treatment:
Drug: Methylene Blue
Procedure: Standard of care abscess drainage
Device: Insertion of optical fiber
Drug: Lipid Emulsion
Device: Optical Spectroscopy Measurement
Device: Laser Illumination (patient-specific dose)
Standard of care abscess drainage
Other group
Description:
Each subject in this arm will receive standard of care abscess drainage
Treatment:
Procedure: Standard of care abscess drainage

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Timothy M Baran, PhD; Ashwani K Sharma, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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