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Medical Imaging and Thermal Treatment for Breast Tumors Using Harmonic Motion Imaging (HMI)

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Columbia University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Fibroadenoma
Breast Cancer Stage I

Treatments

Procedure: Harmonic motion imaging guided focused ultrasound (HMIgFUS)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05219695
AAAS9859

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this study is to demonstrate the initial clinical feasibility of using Harmonic Motion Imaging (HMI) for Focused Ultrasound Surgery (FUS) guidance and monitoring in patients with benign and stage 1 non-metastatic breast cancers. The investigators hypothesize that changes in HMI parameters will inform progression of FUS ablation.

Full description

Patients with small solid tumors without positive lymph nodes have the highest survival rate. However, especially for patients with benign tumors (most common in younger women) and older patients (>65 years old) who fit these criteria, an alternative treatment technique that is less invasive than the current surgical or invasive ablative intervention may be more beneficial. FUS is a noninvasive, non-ionizing treatment procedure that precisely focuses and delivers a large amount of ultrasound energy to the target area, causing localized temperature rise and cell necrosis at the target. The main advantage of focused ultrasound ablation (FUS) is that it avoids surgery. Without surgery, recovery from the procedure is much faster, patients may experience less pain, and cosmetological results may be improved.

The efficacy and safety of FUS rely heavily on treatment monitoring. Treatment imaging techniques currently used include MRI and ultrasound Bmode imaging. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) thermometry is used to detect the temperature rise across the FUS treatment area. However, MRI guidance can be expensive and time-consuming compared to ultrasound-based HIFU guidance methods. Conventional B-mode based 'hyperecho' tracking can be challenging for HIFU monitoring, as it is sensitive to cavitation, which occurs at high temperatures.

HMI is an ultrasound elasticity method that can provide measurements of the locally generated mechanical response and inherent mechanical properties of tissues . The result is a new image that contains unique localized information on the relative stiffness in and around the tumor. The investigators have shown in pre-clinical data that HMI has the ability to monitor mechanical changes in tissue that occur with ablation. The combination of FUS with HMI monitoring is termed HMI guided FUS, or HMIgFUS.

This study aims to evaluate the HMI technique for monitoring FUS ablation in a clinical setting. Eligible and consenting patients will be imaged using HMI, and then will undergo HMIgFUS at a central position inside the tumor. The tumor will be imaged using HMI again following ablation. Following our study, the patients will undergo their scheduled surgery. The purpose of this study is to evaluate HMIgFUS in a lower risk setting, as the tumor will be excised following our study, to better inform future studies, in which surgery may not be needed.

Enrollment

36 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women age ≥18
  • Patients with fibroadenoma (benign tumor) or early-stage, non-metastatic breast cancer (stage I without the involvement of axillary lymph nodes)
  • Scheduled to receive surgical resection of the tumor by the clinical care team (ideal target lesion upper boundary should be deeper than 1 cm below the skin, and the ideal size of the lesion should be 2-5 cm in diameter)

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant or lactating women
  • Patients with breast implants
  • Patients with a history of laser or radiation therapy to the targeted breast
  • Patients who have received or are scheduled to receive thermal ablation or treatment of the tumor (other than surgery) as part of clinical care

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

36 participants in 1 patient group

HMIgFUS
Experimental group
Description:
Each study participants' tumors will be imaged using Harmonic Motion Imaging (HMI), an ultrasound elastography method. A central portion of the tumor will then be ablated and monitored using Harmonic Motion Imaging guided Focus Ultrasound (HMIgFUS). Only one portion of the tumor will be ablated; the other portions of the tumor, including tumor margins, will not be ablated. Following ablation, the tumor will be imaged again using HMI.
Treatment:
Procedure: Harmonic motion imaging guided focused ultrasound (HMIgFUS)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Elisa Konofagou, PhD; Xiaoyue J Li, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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