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Lymphedema Prophylaxis in Breast Cancer Survivors Who Show Early Evidence of High-risk Status

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Stanford University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer
Lymphedema

Treatments

Device: Flexitouch
Device: Class 1 compression garment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00383500
BRSNSTU0007 (Other Identifier)
95970 (Other Identifier)
IRB-01671

Details and patient eligibility

About

To compare the effectiveness of usual treatments for lymphedema [massage and elastic compression sleeve, instituted at-risk and before the development of swelling (lymphedema)], compared to the use of a newly-marketed device, the Flexitouch, which electronically simulates the effect of massage upon lymph flow.

Full description

The current investigation is designed to prospectively evaluate the potential for simple, effective lymphedema prophylaxis in breast cancer survivors who show early evidence of high-risk status. There is growing evidence that the mechanisms of lymphatic repair after injury are mediated through lymphatic flow. Accordingly, this study assess if physical measures designed to prophylactically augment lymphatic flow after surgical interventions for breast cancer (eg, Flexitouch and manual lymphatic massage) will reduce the incidence of lymphatic stagnation, assessed as incidence of lymphedema, when compared to patients who receive conventional "watch and wait" interventions (observation).

The specific aims of the study are

  1. to prospectively assess the presence of newly developing lymphedema in each study subgroup through serial assessment of segmental interstitial fluid content by multiple frequency bioimpedance
  2. to evaluate the preventive interventions in a prospective, randomized fashion, contrasting the responses of equivalent numbers of patients randomized to 2 experimental arms and the control arm of the study
  3. to correlate the bioimpedance findings with concurrently derived, serial assessments of limb volume

Recent advances in the medical understanding of the biological processes of lymphatic development and repair suggest that these mechanisms may be able to be manipulated to enhance the regenerative responses in the lymphatic vasculature following injury. Breast cancer-associated lymphedema is a model of such an acquired form of lymphatic vasculature insufficiency. Clinically, this poses a substantial clinical problem. It is estimated at 1woman in 4 who survives a breast cancer intervention will develop lymphedema, often progressively. The appearance of lymphedema has documented adverse effects on physical and psychologically well-being. New insights into lymphatic repair suggest that such mechanisms can be employed in a prophylactic fashion to forestall or eliminate the development of lymphedema. This proposal investigates this hypothesis in a prospective fashion, using a randomized trial design in 80 patients enrolled at the time of breast cancer surgery. If the investigation documents a beneficial effect of preventive measures, it could have a profound impact on subsequent breast cancer care. These measures are simple and cost-effective and, could help to eliminate the impact of a substantial detractor to the improved longevity and health that breast cancer survivors otherwise may expect to enjoy.

Enrollment

75 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Unilateral breast cancer
  • Scheduled to undergo breast surgery and axillary lymph node dissection, with or without breast conserving techniques.
  • Referred to the surgeons of the Stanford University Breast Cancer Program
  • Capacity to provide informed consent.
  • All experimental protocols will be reviewed and approved by the Stanford Institutional Review Board for the Protection of Human Subjects.

Exclusion criteria

  • Other serious systemic illness (renal failure, hepatic dysfunction, congestive heart failure, neurological or psychological impairment) that would confound the study or impair the patients' ability to participate.
  • Recurrent breast cancer or other forms of pre-existing lymphedema.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

75 participants in 3 patient groups

Flexitouch device
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will self-administer lymphedema management via daily use of the Flexitouch device, an intermittent pneumatic compression device (aka, lymphedema pump)
Treatment:
Device: Flexitouch
Manual Lymphatic Drainage (MLD)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will self-administer lymphedema management via daily manual lymphatic massage therapy, using a Class 1 compression garment
Treatment:
Device: Class 1 compression garment
Observational Control (no intervention)
No Intervention group
Description:
Control group, no intervention. No Flexitouch or manual massage therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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