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Intraoperative Fluorescence-Guided Aspirate Tissue Monitoring of 5-ALA During Brain Tumor Surgery (ATM5-ALA)

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University of Illinois

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Brain Neoplasms

Treatments

Device: HIVEN Medical Device

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT07111182
2025-0505

Details and patient eligibility

About

Gliomas are tumors that occur in all ages; they include the most common malign primary central nervous system tumors in developed countries. Gliomas are often aggressive, and their recommended treatment is surgical resection and chemoradiation. Complete tumor removal is challenging because of diffuse cell growth and the proximity of functionally critical tissues. The current golden standard for intraoperative glioma detection is fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) using 5-ALA. In 5-ALA FGS the drug-induced fluorescence helps to visually detect tumor cells, which improves resection rates and delays tumor progression. Tumor cells are often left unnoticed because of visual obstacles or weak fluorescence, which may lead to local recurrence and reoperations. Surgical suction devices are routinely used to remove cancerous tissues, but so far, the analysis of the suction waste has not been used in near real-time tissue detection.

Full description

A novel medical device (HIVEN®) detects 5-ALA-induced fluorescence from the surgical suction and gives sound feedback to the operating surgeon indicating tumor tissue and overcoming the challenges is the contemporary FGS methods. The 5-ALA (Gleolan, NX Development Corp) has been already FDA-approved since 2017 for fluorescence-guided resection of suspected WHO grade 3 or 4 gliomas. The HIVEN® device has been investigated in Europe during 33 surgeries and the MDR (EU) 2017/745 approval was granted on 09/2025.The device is commercially available in the EU starting from 09/2025. The CE mark is approved for a Class IIb device risk classification. The current medical device study aims to demonstrate the feasibility and the benefit-risk ratio of HIVEN® for detecting tumor fluorescence from the surgical suction waste as a part of the FDA medical device process. The feedback from the device is expected to provide supplementary information on fluorescence and add value to fluorescence-guided surgical workflow.

Enrollment

8 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 99 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:-

  • Patient admitted to neurosurgery department for surgical resection of a suspected grade 3 or 4 glioma with 5-ALA (cases)
  • Patient admitted to neurosurgery department for surgical resection of a primary of secondary brain tumor with no 5-ALA (controls)
  • Patients aged 18 years old or older (all patients)
  • Informed consent obtained (all patients)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patient belongs to the following vulnerable groups: children, pregnant, prisoners or intellectually disabled.
  • The participants are not randomized. Randomization is not conducted as the number of eligible patients is limited, subjecting to a long recruitment period that reciprocally increases the bias from uncontrollable (evolving) surgical techniques and adjunct treatments.
  • The patients are screened and informed of the study before the surgical operation and enrolled after verification of eligibility and written informed consent has been received.

Potential study participants are identified from the clinic's planned or urgent surgeries list. The participants are contacted before the operation by the research staff and/or the physician responsible for the treatment. The participants are provided with written and oral information about the research and the time to consider their participation. Finally, the participants are asked for their informed consent and enrolled to the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Device Feasibility

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

8 participants in 1 patient group

Usability Assessment
Other group
Description:
Neurosurgeons and surgical nurses have assessed the usability, performance and safety of the device based on operation video recordings or user testing with high-grade glioma-simulating synthetic phantoms. neurosurgeons will use the HIVEN® during high-grade glioma surgeries in patients in authentic conditions according to the intended use and IFU and assessed its performance and benefit-risk profile. Surgical nurses gave feedback on the device's preoperative preparations and usability during the interventional study.
Treatment:
Device: HIVEN Medical Device

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Linda Rose-Finnell, MPA; Fady T Charbel, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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