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ALA-induced Fluorescence Imaging of Breast Cancers Using the Handheld PRODIGI and Eagle Imaging Devices

University Health Network, Toronto logo

University Health Network, Toronto

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01837225
10-0633-CE

Details and patient eligibility

About

Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer in women. Currently, breast conservation surgery (BCS) is the treatment most often prescribed. BCS involves removing the tumor while conserving the greatest amount of healthy breast tissue. Under standard white light, tumor borders are difficult for the surgeons to visualize. Therefore, between 30-70% of patients require a second operation to remove remaining cancerous tissue that wasn't detected during the initial surgery. Thus, there is an urgent clinical need for a new imaging tool that improves tumor visualization during the first surgery.

PRODIGI, a new hand-held optical imaging device, uses a safe violet-blue light to detect fluorescence signals in the tissue. Different tissues are associated with specific fluorescent colors and therefore the device can be used to differentiate between tumor and healthy breast tissue. Based on previous clinical data, PRODIGI can distinguish some tumors from normal tissues, but is not specific enough to detect a difference across all breast tumor types.

The fluorescent contrast drug 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) accumulates in tumors naturally and previous research has shown that 5-ALA increases tumor-normal tissue fluorescence contrast. In this observational clinical study, PRODIGI and 5-ALA will be used to visualize tumor borders during BCS. 5-ALA induced fluorescent images from the surgical sample and the surgical bed obtained by PRODIGI will be compared retrospectively with the images taken under standard white light and/or autofluorescence. The technology's ability to accurately identify tumor borders better than conventional practice will be confirmed by tissue pathology.

Full description

The investigators hypothesize that 5-ALA will selectively increase breast tumor-to-normal fluorescent contrast and therefore increase tumor margin delineation using the PRODIGI device compared to standard white light or autofluorescence visualization. The goal of this observational study is to use intraoperative fluorescence imaging across all three patient cohorts (control, 15mg/kg 5-ALA, 30mg/kg 5-ALA) to determine if there is an increase in tumor-specific fluorescence contrast, and to select the optimum 5-ALA contrast agent dose. All patients across each cohort will receive conventional BCS and care independent of contrast agent dose. Data from this preliminary study will be used to guide the design of future statistically powered randomized controlled trials involving PRODIGI and 5-ALA. However, at this early stage our initial aim is to develop a baseline understanding of the 5-ALA fluorescent signatures in normal and tumor breast tissues in the surgical setting.

This technology has the potential to guide surgeons during BCS and reduce the re-incision rates by ensuring that the surgeons can properly identify tumor from normal tissue during surgery. If successful, this new fluorescence imaging technology may improve patient outcomes by reducing the likelihood of cancer recurrence, accelerating the recovery process and decreasing healthcare costs by eliminating the need for a second surgery.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Female patients with breast cancer
  2. 18 years or older
  3. Have consented for their standard surgeries for primary invasive breast cancers, with or without auxiliary procedure.
  4. Have existing biopsies banked at the hospital (for ALA patients)

Exclusion criteria

  1. Pre-operative therapy (including chemotherapy, endocrine therapy and radiotherapy)
  2. Inability to consent
  3. Prior history of photosensitivity, liver disease, or recurrent disease
  4. Pregnancy
  5. Absence of in-house core biopsy in tissue bank

Trial design

90 participants in 4 patient groups

Control
Description:
Patients in the control arm will not receive the fluorescent contrast agent (5-ALA); however, intraoperative fluorescence imaging will still be performed. Patients will receive conventional breast conservation surgery and care independent of the contrast agent dose they receive.
Low Dose Contrast Agent
Description:
Patients in the low dose arm will receive 15 mg/kg 5-ALA fluorescent contrast agent administered orally 3 hours prior to intraoperative fluorescence imaging. Patients will receive conventional breast conservation surgery and care independent of the contrast agent dose they receive.
High Dose Contrast Agent
Description:
Patients in the high dose arm will receive 30 mg/kg 5-ALA fluorescent contrast agent administered orally 3 hours prior to intraoperative fluorescence imaging. Patients will receive conventional breast conservation surgery and care independent of the contrast agent dose they receive.
Intermediate Dose Contrast Agent
Description:
Patients in the intermediate dose arm will receive 20 mg/kg 5-ALA fluorescent contrast agent administered orally 3 hours prior to intraoperative fluorescence imaging. Patients will receive conventional breast conservation surgery and care independent of the contrast agent dose they receive.

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Ralph S DaCosta, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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