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The purpose of this research study is to see if a specific kind of MRI can identify small and otherwise undetected abnormal lymph nodes in patients with thyroid cancer who are undergoing surgery. The MRI is called Ultra-Small Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Magnetic Resonance Imaging (USPIO MRI), and uses an experimental contrast agent (ferumoxytol), to try to identify these lymph nodes. The MRI uses magnetic waves to take images (pictures) of the body and is commonly used in medical testing.
Ferumoxytol is FDA approved as an iron replacement product for the treatment of iron deficiency anemia in adult patients with chronic kidney disease.
In this research study, the investigators want to see if Ferumoxytol will help to identify very small metastases that are not usually seen on standard MRI scans. If the use of USPIO MRI with the experimental agent ferumoxytol identifies very small metastases in lymph nodes, your surgeon may decide to remove them. After the surgery, the nodes will be stored and then analyzed to assess the ability of USPIO MRI and ferumoxytol to detect cancer in very small metastases in the lymph nodes.
Full description
In this research study each participant will have the study MRI (USPIO MRI) before he/she undergoes surgery. Radiologists (doctors trained to read and understand this test) will review this study MRI. The imaging results will be compared with the pathology reports from the tissue removed during your surgery.
Before the research starts (screening):
After signing this consent form, the participant will be asked to undergo some screening tests or procedures to find out if the participant can be in the research study. These tests and procedures were done as part of regular care and would have been done even if it turns out that the participant does not take part in the research study.
After the screening procedures confirm that the Participant is eligible to participate in the research study:
The participant will have one research MRI scan:
On the first day, the participant will receive the contrast agent intravenously. This visit will take about 30 minutes.
Before injecting the contrast medium, the investigator will clean the skin on the participant's forearm with alcohol. Then the investigator will insert a small plastic tube (IV) into a vein in the participant's forearm. The investigator will give the participant the study agent, ferumoxytol, through the IV line. The dose of ferumoxytol and the rate of administration will not be more than the dose the FDA has approved when people who have anemia use this for iron replacement therapy. Before, during and until 30 minutes after the participant get the ferumoxytol, the investigator will monitor (watch) the participant closely for any reactions to the infusion. The participant will return to Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston MA 02114, 48-72 hours for the post contrast MRI. The participant will not receive Ferumoxytol before this MRI. This study visit will take about 45 minutes.
The participant will lie on a padded table. The table will move into a scanning machine. The space in the scanning machine is very narrow, just a bit wider than that participant's body. The participant will need to lie quietly for about 30 minutes while the images are being taken. If the participant has problems with claustrophobia (fear or discomfort in small or confined spaces), let the study doctor or a member of the staff know before enrolling in this study.
During the MRI procedure, the participant will hear loud "banging" noises. This is the sound the powerful magnets make during the test. The participant will be given earplugs to help reduce the noise. The participant will also be able to talk to the MRI technologist during the test and the technologist will be able to talk to the participant. If, during the test, the participant feels too uncomfortable to continue, let the technologist know, and the test will be stopped immediately.
If any of the participant's MRIs show unusual results that might be important for your health, the study doctor will contact the participant's primary surgeon. The participant's MRIs will be reviewed by a radiologist. They will be read and interpreted and the results will be communicated to the participant's surgeon before scheduled surgery. The MRI scan may show abnormal signals in lymph nodes that are outside the area that the surgeon normally removes and the surgeon may decide to extend the surgery to include this additional area. During the scheduled surgery, the participant's surgeon will remove the participant's thyroid and any lymph nodes that s/he believes are involved.
The surgery will be performed within 30 days of the MRIs. The imaging results will then be compared with the tissue that is removed during the surgery.
The thyroid and involved lymph nodes that were surgically removed will be evaluated by a pathologist and then stored for future assessment in case the thyroid cancer recurs in the body. This will allow the investigators to compare the kind of tumor removed at time of first surgery to the tumor that has recurred.
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Exclusion criteria
Pregnant women are excluded from this study because there are no studies of ferumoxytol in pregnant women. In animal studies, ferumoxytol caused decreased fetal weights and fetal malformations at maternally toxic doses of 13-15 times the human dose. It is unknown if ferumoxytol is present in human milk. Because of the potential for adverse events in nursing infants, a decision should be made whether to discontinue nursing or to avoid ferumoxytol.
Individuals with a history of a different malignancy are ineligible except for the following circumstances. Individuals with a history of other malignancies are eligible if they have been disease-free for at least 5 years and are deemed by the investigator to be at low risk for recurrence of that malignancy.
HIV-positive individuals on combination antiretroviral therapy are ineligible because of the potential for pharmacokinetic interactions with ferumoxytol and the propensity to have inflammatory adenopathy.
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12 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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