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Radiosurgical Hypophysectomy for Bone Metasteses Pain

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Johns Hopkins Medicine

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Bone Metastases

Treatments

Radiation: radiosurgical hypophysectomy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03377517
J17181
IRB00158648 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research is being done to see if a delivery of a single high dose of radiation therapy to a small area of the pituitary gland and pituitary stalk in a highly precise manner may be helpful in reducing intractable pain from bone metastases.

Full description

Although not currently standard of care, small series suggest both safety and efficacy of radiosurgical hypophysectomy in reducing cancer pain from bone metastases. In spite of the demonstrated feasibility in meeting normal tissue constraints and preliminary data suggestive of both safety and efficacy, radiosurgical hypophysectomy is rarely performed in clinical practice, and many radiation oncologists are not even aware of its potential to reduce intractable cancer pain. This is likely because, to date, well-designed prospective studies have not been performed to further explore both the safety and efficacy of the intervention. This single arm pilot study is designed to fill that void. If successful, the investigators plan to utilize the data to support the proposal of a larger scale follow-up clinical trial.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 100 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Cytologic proof of malignancy
  2. Radiographic evidence of bone metastases
  3. Intractable pain uncontrolled by opioids, medical management, injections/ablation or surgical intervention that would be difficult to address with conventional radiation therapy or other standard options and is limiting the patient's function and quality of life. Intractable pain will be defined as a visual analogue score of at least 4.
  4. Definitive radiographic progression of osseous and/or visceral metastases on standard staging scans (CT, MRI, bone scan, PET scan or any other standard of care imaging) performed within the last 3 months in spite of standard oncologic interventions and/or inability to tolerate standard oncologic interventions
  5. Life expectancy at least 4 weeks
  6. Age≥ 18 years
  7. Patients of childbearing potential (male or female) must practice adequate contraception due to possible harmful effects of radiation therapy on an unborn child
  8. Patient must have the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document
  9. All patients must be informed of the investigational nature of this study and must be given written informed consent in accordance with institutional and federal guidelines

Exclusion criteria

  1. Prior brain radiation
  2. Patients must not have a serious medical or psychiatric illness that would, in the opinion of the treating physician prevent informed consent or completion of protocol treatment
  3. Isolated localized pain amenable to focal radiation therapy, or pain well controlled by opioids, medical management, injections/ablation or surgical intervention
  4. Malignancies being managed with curative intent
  5. Life expectancy <4 weeks
  6. The tumor amenable to curative management

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 1 patient group

ResearchTreatment Plan
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will be treated to a dose of 150 Gy in a single fraction. All patients will undergo CT simulation with 1 mm slices as well as MRI simulation including at least high resolution 1 mm slice T1 weighted MRI. They will be treated in a supine position using an aquaplast mask system for immobilization.
Treatment:
Radiation: radiosurgical hypophysectomy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Danielle Wendler, RN; Kristin Redmond, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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