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A Study to Evaluate the Safety and Feasibility of Transcranial MRI-Guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery in the Treatment of Brain Tumors
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Although the initial treatment of malignant gliomas is well established, the best treatment for progressive disease remains undefined. Patients with newly diagnosed gliomas are typically treated with surgery followed by conformal radiation and concomitant chemotherapy. Even though these tumors are not curable, prolonged survival can be achieved in selected patients. Despite improved multimodal therapies, almost all of the patients experience recurrence at the site of the primary tumor where they have already received maximal surgical resection and radiation therapy. Typically, these patients have a life expectancy of approximately 6 months, with less than a third of patients alive at one year. Salvage therapy for these patients usually take the form of various systemic chemotherapeutic agents because localized therapies such as reirradiation may not be possible in the previously irradiated site. As progressive disease has very poor response rates to current systemic therapies, efforts to define the role of novel local therapies, such as MR guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS), is necessary.
There are very few local therapy options for progressive gliomas. Traditionally, reirradiation and surgery are considered last resort treatments for symptomatic recurrence. In the initial treatment of gliomas, the tumor and surrounding brain receive near tolerance doses and usually preclude a second course of radiation therapy. If clinically advisable and feasible, a second operation may be undertaken but is usually reserved for younger patients with a good neurological status who are developing neurological symptoms related to the mass effect of the tumor. The use of MR guided focused ultrasound represents a new, noninvasive therapeutic option that overcomes some of the limitations of secondary surgery or reirradiation and provides the patient with an option for local ablative therapy. The lesioning of the tumor is done accurately under MRI guidance with real-time monitoring of the ablative ultrasonic hyperthermia. As the cytotoxic affects are due to hyperthermia, there is no cumulative radiation affect which limits the use of radiotherapy in recurrent disease. The potential benefits for the patient include local control of the disease/tumor, and prolonging the time to subsequent salvage therapies.
A similar situation exists for brain metastases. Historically, the development of brain metastases was considered a terminal event, however, with better local therapies as well a systemic therapies, patients are living longer. Initial management of patients with brain metastases usually involves surgery, whole brain radiation, radiosurgery or a combination of these modalities depending on the clinical situation. The goal of treating brain metastases is to prevent the patient from succumbing to CNS disease. As improved systemic therapy has lengthened the survival of patients with metastatic tumors, more patients are surviving and developing recurrent or progressive metastatic CNS disease. Progressive disease usually requires more local therapies as chemotherapeutic agents do not adequately cross the blood brain barrier to have a large impact on CNS metastases. MRIgFUS could play and important role in ablating brain metastases in patients who have already been maximally radiated and are otherwise without options.
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Inclusion criteria
Men or women.
Age between 18 and 75 years, inclusive.
Able and willing to give informed consent.
Able to tolerate pre / post - procedure steroid treatment
Subjects with recurrent or progressive glioma who have failed standard therapy with surgery and/or radiation for whom local therapy has been requested by the neuro-oncologist. This treatment will be offered as an option for those patients where neither surgery or repeat radiotherapy is advised by the multidisciplinary team.
OR Patients with metastatic brain cancer that has progressed despite prior radiotherapy and local therapy is requested by the oncologist. This treatment will be offered as an option for those patients where surgery is not indicated and discussed with the potential options for repeat radiotherapy or salvage radiosurgery by the multidisciplinary team.
The targeted tumor tissue is located in the cerebral hemispheres, > 2.5 cm from the inner table of the skull. Non-targeted parts of the tumor may extend outside the treated tumor limits.
Tumor(s) are clearly defined on pre-therapy contrast enhanced MRI scans.
Size of the targeted portion of the tumor (i.e. prescribed ROT) is less than 2.5 cm in diameter (8 cm3 in volume). The non-targeted tumor tissue may exceed the targeted volume.
Karnofsky rating 70-100.
ASA score 1-3.
Able to communicate sensations during the ExAblate MRGFUS procedure.
Able to attend all study visits (i.e., life expectancy of at least 3 months).
At least 14 days passed since last brain surgery or radiation therapy.
Exclusion criteria
The tumor's not visible on the pre-therapy imaging
The tumor presenting the following imaging characteristics
The sonication pathway to the tumor involves
The subject presents with:
Anti-coagulant therapy, on medications known to increase risk of hemorrhage, (e.g.: non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), statins)
Patients with history of bleeding disorder or with history of spontaneous haemorrhage tumour
Abnormal level of platelets (< 100000), PT (>14) or PTT (>36), and INR > 1.3.
Documented cerebral infarction within past 12 months
TIA or stroke in the last 1 month.
Patients with cerebral or systemic vasculopathy:
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
Patients taking immunosuppressants (corticosteroids to prevent/treat brain edema are permitted).
Known sensitivity to gadolinium-DTPA.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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