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Application of FET-PET in Fusion With MRI in the Treatment of Glioblastoma Multiforme [TYR-GLIO]

C

Copernicus Memorial Hospital

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Glioblastoma Multiforme

Treatments

Other: MRI+T1C
Other: MRI & PET fusion

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06466031
2023/ABM/01/00010

Details and patient eligibility

About

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM WHO IV) is the most common and aggressive primary brain tumor in adults, carrying a poor prognosis with a median survival of 12-16 months. The annual incidence is approximately 5 per 100,000 (roughly 600 cases annually in Poland), predominantly affecting individuals in their prime productive years. The standard of care consists of maximal safe resection followed by the Stupp protocol (60 Gy fractionated radiotherapy and temozolomide chemotherapy).

Routine surgical management relies on contrast-enhanced MRI. Gross total resection (GTR) is defined as the complete removal of the contrast-enhancing lesion. Although GTR improves progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), local recurrence at the operative site occurs in up to 51% of patients within a year. This rapid regrowth is driven by glioblastoma stem cells infiltrating the surrounding non-enhancing brain tissue. Consequently, standard contrast-enhanced MRI lacks the sensitivity required to define true tumor boundaries for optimal patient outcomes.

To overcome this, positron emission tomography (PET-CT) using amino acid tracers like 18F-fluoroethyl-L-tyrosine (18F-FET) offers a promising alternative. Unlike 18-FDG, which is obscured by physiologically high glucose uptake in healthy brain tissue, 18F-FET provides high specificity and sensitivity for glial tumors. Crucially, studies show that MRI contrast enhancement overlaps with only 58% of the hypermetabolic area identified by 18F-FET. While "supramarginal" resections based on FLAIR MRI abnormalities (assumed to contain infiltrating stem cells) improve PFS by roughly 2 months, the FLAIR sequence cannot definitively distinguish active tumor infiltration from standard peritumoral edema.

This proposed experiment carries significant innovative value: it aims to use the fusion of 18F-FET PET and contrast-enhanced MRI to precisely guide both primary surgical resection and postoperative radiotherapy. By redefining the primary target volume to include the area of true biological tumor activity rather than just the MRI-enhancing mass (incorporating it into GTV, CTV, and PTV planning), the procedure directly targets residual glioblastoma stem cells. While PET has been evaluated for radiotherapy planning in recurrent GBM, high-quality data regarding its use for primary surgical planning is lacking. This study aims to fill that crucial gap in the literature.

Enrollment

189 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Single macroscopic tumor focus with the appearance of glioblastoma multiforme on MRI with contrast - contrast-enhancing lesion, completely or with central necrosis, with surrounding edema.
  • No history of cancer in other organs. No suspicious lesions on X-ray of the chest and abdomen (CT with contrast).
  • No clinical suspicion of brain abscess - no meningeal symptoms, signs of neuroinfection, fever, elevated inflammatory parameters.
  • Primary tumor, without neurosurgical, radiotherapy or oncology intervention. Prior tumor biopsy is allowed.
  • Tumor eligible for surgical treatment - craniotomy and tumor resection.
  • Age ≥ 18 years but < 70 years old.
  • Quality of life assessment: KPS ≥ 70.
  • Informed patient consent to the study and proposed treatment.
  • No allergy to contrast agents used in PET and MRI.
  • No medical contraindications to neurosurgery - craniotomy and resection.

Exclusion criteria

  • Multifocal brain tumor.
  • Recurrence of glioblastoma multiforme.
  • Clinical or radiological suspicion of brain metastasis or brain abscess.
  • Postoperative histopathological diagnosis other than WHO grade IV glioblastoma.
  • Medical contraindications to any surgery under general anesthesia.
  • Pregnancy, breastfeeding.
  • Known allergy to gadolinium contrast or radiopharmaceutical tracing agent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

189 participants in 3 patient groups

Resection and radiotherapy according to the MRI & PET fusion
Experimental group
Description:
Surgical treatment and radiotherapy planned based on FET-PET and MRI+T1C fusion.
Treatment:
Other: MRI & PET fusion
Radiotherapy according to the MRI & PET fusion
Experimental group
Description:
Surgical treatment planned based on MRI+T1C study, radiotherapy planned based on FET-PET and MRI+T1C fusion.
Treatment:
Other: MRI & PET fusion
Other: MRI+T1C
Resection and radiotherapy according to the MRI
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Surgical treatment and radiotherapy planned based on MRI+T1C.
Treatment:
Other: MRI+T1C

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Kamil Krystkiewicz, PhD; Marcin Tosik, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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