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Primary Objectives:
Pilot Portion: To determine the feasibility and safety of administering oral glyburide to non-diabetic patients receiving stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for newly diagnosed brain metastases.
Randomized Portion: To determine the number of patients with newly diagnosed brain metastases who have an increase in edema as measured on volumetric FLAIR imaging and the number of patients that require dexamethasone administration (or any corticosteroid administration with the purpose of treating cerebral edema) from the day of SRS to one month follow-up MRI in the group receiving glyburide versus placebo.
Full description
Many patients with cancer that has spread to the brain have side effects caused by swelling around the tumors. A common treatment for this swelling is a medicine called dexamethasone. Dexamethasone is a steroid. Long-term use of steroids has several known side effects.
Recent studies have shown that a drug commonly used in to control high blood sugar in diabetes, called glyburide, can decrease brain swelling in patients with brain damage or stroke. Animal studies have shown that this drug may also reduce swelling from tumors in the brain. Researchers are interested in whether glyburide could treat brain swelling as well as dexamethasone with fewer side effects.
This study is being done to see whether glyburide is safe to be used in patients without diabetes in combination with receiving SRS for brain metastases. This study will also find out if glyburide will decrease brain swelling in patients that get radiosurgery (SRS) for brain metastases. This study will also find out if taking glyburide will decrease the chance of needing steroids due to brain swelling that is causing symptoms. It is not yet known, but it is the investigators' hope that glyburide will both decrease brain swelling and lessen the chance of needing steroids.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with newly diagnosed brain metastases deemed to be eligible for radiosurgery.
Subject must have cytologically or histologically confirmed malignancy (this is the original malignancy, not the brain metastases).
A diagnostic contrast-enhanced MRI of the brain must be performed within 60 days prior to registration. The contrast-enhancing intraparenchymal brain tumor must be well visualized.
History and physical with neurological examination, height, and weight within 14 days prior to registration
No dexamethasone use (or any other corticosteroid use with the purpose of treating cerebral edema) starting 5 days prior to SRS. Patients may be tapered to meet this criterion if deemed safe by the treating physician.
Women of child-bearing potential (e.g. not post-menopausal or permanently sterilized women) must have a negative pregnancy test obtained within 14 days prior to registration. This is to prevent potential harm to the fetus by glyburide and radiotherapy.
CBC with differential and CMP including Liver Function Tests (LFTs) obtained within 14 days prior to registration and meeting the following requirements:
For the Randomized Portion only: Subject must have at least 2 of the following risk factors: {For the Pilot Portion, it is not required that patients have the risk factors mentioned in Inclusion Criteria 9.}
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
1 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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