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Electroporation is a method that can facilitate transport of molecules across the cell membrane and into the cell by means of electrical pulses. The method can be used with molecules that normally have difficulty passing the cell membrane such as chemotherapy (electrochemotherapy). Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is used in cancer therapy, where chemotherapy is administered intratumoral or intravenous, then followed by electrical pulses applied directly on the tumor. The chemotherapy accumulates in the cancer cells which results in an increased cytotoxic effect. The most used chemotherapeutic drug used in electrochemotherapy is bleomycin. Electrochemotherapy is a well-documented local treatment form for especially cutaneous tumors. Today, the treatment is used mostly in palliative care in more than 140 centres around Europe.
In vitro and in vivo studies have shown that the combination of calcium and electroporation is an effective method in killing cancer cells without serious side effects.This new combination opens the possibility of replacing bleomycin with calcium in treatments with electroporation.
Calcium electroporation is a local treatment where calcium is administered intratumoral and followed by electrical pulses applied on the tumor.
The preclinical studies have shown that there is a difference in sensitivity in tumor cells and normal cells, as normal cells tolerate the treatment better than tumor cells (own data manuscript in preparation). The studies have also shown that there is no cell injury by calcium injection without electroporation, the investigators therefore expect that the treatment only will cause minor side effects.
Calcium electroporation would be possible to use on patients for whom chemotherapy is contradicted e.g. severe lung functions impairment, pregnant woman etc. Calcium electroporation is a simple and unexpensive cancer treatment that does not involve any administration of cytotoxic chemotherapy, and can be performed by surgeons, radiologists as well as oncologists. Both electroporation equipment and calcium are already being used in the clinic, so the treatment can easily be implemented.
Full description
Trial Design for Treatment of Cutaneous Metastases:
The current study is a randomized double blinded phase II study comparing the effect of calcium electroporation with ECT with bleomycin on patients with cutaneous metastases of any histology. As calcium and bleomycin are administered intratumoral, only small metastases from 0.5-3 cm will be treated. The treatments will be compared in tumor response and adverse events. Treatment will be done in a palliative purpose.
Cancer patients with cutaneous involvement have often several metastases. A maximum of ten metastases will be included per patient. One to six metastases (depending on the patient's number of metastases) will be numbered 1-6 and randomized into one of two treatment arms
If the patient has more than six metastases, then one to four metastases will be used for biopsy. The treatment of these metastases will be known, and biopsies will be performed before and after treatment.
Biopsies will only be performed if the patient has more than six metastases. The metastases used for biopsy will not be evaluated on response.
The treatment will be performed in local or general anesthesia depending on location and number of metastases. Bleomycin/calcium will be administered intratumorally and immediately after the electrode will be placed on the metastasis. The electric pulses are generated using a cliniporator according to ESOPE (European Standard Operating Procedure of Electrochemotherapy). The therapy is a once only treatment and the patients will be followed up with regular clinical controls for six months. At follow up six months after treatment, the randomization code for the one patient will be revealed. If the patient agrees, biopsies will then be taken from an area treated with calcium and an area treated with bleomycin. Last visit will be one year after treatment.
To identify the metastases at follow up visits, the metastases will be marked with a pen, numbered and documented with clinical photos at baseline.
Randomization The metastases are randomized by block randomization and are done separately in each patient. The randomization is performed by an extern unit, using the computer program nQuery Adviser 7.0. The bleomycin and calcium are mixed and labeled by an extern unit, and since both calcium and bleomycin are transparent and identical in volume, it is possible to label the syringes in a manner to blind the treating doctor. The syringes are labeled with numbers according to the metastases so syringe number "1" goes to metastasis number "1" and so on. The randomization code is kept behind locked doors, and is not accessible to the treating doctor. The randomization code is revealed for each patient after follow up, 6 months after treatment.
The randomization code can be revealed before completion of the investigation, if the investigator believes that the treatment causes so serious unexpected events or reactions, that a continuation of treatment is unacceptable.
As the randomization is done separately in each patient, code-break is possible for the individual patient, without breaking the code of the other participants.
Dose In the preclinical study, the tumors were treated with isotonic calcium chloride solution 168 mmol/L and with a volume equivalent to 0.5 x tumor volume, and this with good effect. In another preclinical study the investigators have tested the effect of this dose in different tumor types and saw variable results of the response rate. Some tumor types showed slightly lower response at this dose (own data, manuscript in preparation). Because of this experience the investigators have decided to increase the dose of calcium chloride, in this trial, to 220 mmol/L.
Volume of calcium chloride is dependent on tumor volume. Smaller tumors should have bigger volume per cm³, as smaller tumors are expected to have a bigger loss of injected medicine into the surrounding tissue. The dose volume is calculated according to the "European Standard Operating Procedure of the Electrochemotherapy (ESOPE)".
Calcium
Calcium chloride 220 mmol/L (9 mg/ml):
Bleomycin Both dose and volume of bleomycin is standard according to ESOPE
Bleomycin 1000 IU/ml:
Maximum of injected bleomycin per tumor will be 1500 IU and total dose per treatment 7500 IU. Normal maximum limit for bleomycin is 15.000 IU/m² body surface area.
Bleomycin and calcium chloride are mixed and labeled according to current guidelines. The mixtures will be used in a maximum of 6 hours after mixing.
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7 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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