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Effectiveness of Fluoroscopy-guided MLD for Treatment of BCRL (EFforT-BCRL)

U

Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Neoplasm
Lymphedema

Treatments

Other: Placebo MLD
Other: Skin care
Other: Information
Other: Traditional MLD
Other: Fluoroscopy-guided MLD
Other: Compression therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02609724
IWT150178

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main scientific objective of this multicentric double-blinded randomised controlled trial entails examining the effectiveness of fluoroscopy-guided MLD versus traditional MLD versus placebo MLD, applied as part of the intensive and maintenance phase of Decongestive Lymphatic Therapy, for the treatment of BCRL Secondary scientific objectives entail examining the relationship between different variables of lymphoedema at baseline

Full description

According to the International Society of Lymphology, lymphoedema needs to be treated with Decongestive Lymphatic Therapy (Consensus Document ISL 2013). This is a two-stage treatment programme. During the first or intensive phase, lymphoedema has to be maximally reduced. This phase consists of skin care, manual lymph drainage (MLD), multi-layer bandaging and exercise therapy. The second or maintenance phase aims to conserve and optimise the results obtained in the first phase. It consists of skin care, compression by a low-stretch elastic sleeve, exercises and lymph drainage. Skin care, multi-layer bandaging, elastic sleeve and exercises are treatment modalities that (after instructing the patient) can be performed by the patient herself. MLD has to be applied by a physical therapist and hence entails a big financial cost for the patient and the Health Care (Kärki et al 2009). The effectiveness of MLD applied during the intensive phase has been investigated by 5 randomised controlled trials, but there is conflicting evidence. So, further investigation is warranted to determine the relative benefit of MLD. The effectiveness of MLD applied during the maintenance phase has never been investigated (Devoogdt et al 2010, Oremus et al 2012, Huang et al 2013, Ezzo et al 2015).

A possible explanation why MLD is not obviously proven to be effective, is that MLD is applied in an inefficient way: during MLD, hand manoeuvres are applied on all lymph nodes and lymphatics that may be anatomically present. After axillary dissection and/ or radiotherapy (for the treatment of breast cancer), the lymphatic system is damaged: lymph nodes are removed and often fibrosis of the superficial lymphatic system occurs. As a result, rerouting of the lymphatic drainage occurs. Rerouting is patient-specific, consequently, it is possible that the traditional MLD needs be abandoned and a tailored approach needs to be established. Lymphofluoroscopy can aid to apply a more efficient MLD. During lymphofluoroscopy, a fluorescent substance is injected subcutaneously in the hand and it visualizes the transport of lymph from the hand up to the axilla and it demonstrates alternative pathways towards other lymph nodes.

A second explanation why the traditional method of MLD is not proven to be effective, is that research has shown that MLD with high pressure (vs low pressure) is more effective to improve lymph transport, as well as gliding (vs no gliding). During the new method of MLD (or fluoroscopy-guided MLD), the therapist only performs hand movements on functional lymphatics and lymph nodes. In addition, the hand movements are applied with higher pressure and lymph transport through the lymph collaterals is stimulated by applying strikes across the skin.

Therefore, the main scientific objective entails examining the effectiveness of fluoroscopy-guided MLD versus traditional MLD versus placebo MLD, applied as part of the intensive and maintenance phase of Decongestive Lymphatic Therapy, for the treatment of BCRL

Enrollment

194 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age >18y (since the treatment with MLD and the investigation using ICG is not dangerous for pregnant women, women with child bearing age are included)
  • Women/ men with breast cancer-related lymphoedema
  • Chronic lymphoedema (>3 months present), stage I to IIb
  • At least 5% difference between both arms and/ or hands, adjusted for dominance
  • Written informed consent obtained

Exclusion criteria

  • Allergy for iodine, sodiumiodine, ICG
  • Increased activity of the thyroid gland; benign tumors of the thyroid gland
  • Age <18y
  • Oedema of the upper limb from other causes
  • Active metastasis of the cancer
  • Surgery of the lymphatic system in the past (lymph node transplantation, lymphovenous shunt)
  • Cannot participate during the entire study period
  • Mentally or physically unable to participate in the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

194 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group

Fluoroscopy-guided MLD
Experimental group
Description:
Information, skin care, compression therapy, exercises and fluoroscopy-guided MLD 3 weeks (14 sessions of 60 minutes) of intensive treatment 6 months (18 sessions of 60 minutes) of maintenance treatment 6 months of follow-up
Treatment:
Other: Compression therapy
Other: Skin care
Other: Information
Other: Fluoroscopy-guided MLD
Traditional MLD
Active Comparator group
Description:
Information, skin care, compression therapy, exercises and traditional MLD 3 weeks (14 sessions of 60 minutes) of intensive treatment 6 months (18 sessions of 60 minutes) of maintenance treatment 6 months of follow-up
Treatment:
Other: Compression therapy
Other: Skin care
Other: Information
Other: Traditional MLD
Placebo MLD
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Information, skin care, compression therapy, exercises and placebo MLD 3 weeks (14 sessions of 60 minutes) of intensive treatment 6 months (18 sessions of 60 minutes) of maintenance treatment 6 months of follow-up
Treatment:
Other: Compression therapy
Other: Skin care
Other: Placebo MLD
Other: Information

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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