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Scalp Cooling for Chemotherapy-Induced Alopecia in Patients of Color

Montefiore Medicine Academic Health System logo

Montefiore Medicine Academic Health System

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Alopecia

Treatments

Device: Scalp cooling with hairstyle
Device: Scalp cooling with conditioner and water emulsion

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05213936
2021-13614

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate hairstyling techniques aimed at increasing efficacy of scalp cooling in the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia, determine scalp cooling effect on persistent chemotherapy-induced alopecia, and elucidate molecular mechanisms and predictive biomarkers associated with scalp cooling success in patients with skin of color receiving chemotherapy for breast or non-small cell lung cancer.

This study is being conducted because prior studies have found scalp cooling to be highly effective in preventing hair loss resulting from chemotherapy. However, minority representation was largely limited in completed trials. A recent study found that scalp cooling devices are less efficacious in patients with skin of color, likely because patients with skin of color have hair is predominantly types 3 (curly) and 4 (kinky), which tend to become bulkier when wet and can interfere with scalp cooling cap fitting. The investigators plan to test two techniques aimed at improving scalp cooling efficacy in patients with skin of color through hairstyling methods that minimize hair volume in order to increase cooling cap to scalp contact: 1) cornrows/braids/twists or 2) water/conditioner emulsion on hair. Preliminary data show that breast cancer patients with type 3 or 4 hair receiving taxane chemotherapy and scalp cooling using these techniques to prepare the hair for scalp cooling cap fitting all experienced hair preservation. Additionally, the investigators will also assess persistent chemotherapy-induced alopecia outcomes and incidence by following patients up to 6 months after completing treatment. Finally, specific gene expression changes in taxane-induced chemotherapy-induced alopecia in vitro have been described previously. The investigators will test the hypothesis that scalp cooling reverses such changes in chemotherapy-induced alopecia, assess for biomarkers predictive for scalp cooling success, and investigate persistent chemotherapy-induced alopecia molecular mechanisms using non-invasive transcriptome sequencing on plucked hair follicles.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age >= 18 years

  2. Female

  3. Hair type 3 (curly) or type 4 (kinky)

  4. Diagnosis of breast cancer or non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or gynecologic cancer stage I-IV

  5. Patient will be starting >= 4 cycles of taxane-based chemotherapy treatment for curative intent after enrollment

    a. Concurrent HER, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide therapies and doxorubicin therapies allowed

  6. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) 0-2: fully active, restrictive in physically strenuous activity, ambulatory and capable of self-care

Exclusion criteria

  1. Hair type other than 3 or 4
  2. Male
  3. Use of hair weave or extensions without plans to remove
  4. Concurrent malignancy including hematologic malignancies (i.e. leukemia or lymphoma)
  5. Alopecia Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events > grade 1 at baseline
  6. Past chemotherapy administration if past treatment was <= 10 years ago
  7. History of migraines or cluster headaches, anorexia, severe anemia, uncontrolled diabetes, hepatitis, thyroid dysfunction, cold urticaria, cold agglutinin disease, scalp metastases
  8. Planned bone marrow ablation chemotherapy or skull irradiation
  9. Pregnant patient

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

30 participants in 3 patient groups

Scalp cooling with hairstyle
Experimental group
Description:
Scalp cooling with hairstyle (braids, twists, cornrows) to minimize hair volume and increase scalp cooling cap to scalp contact
Treatment:
Device: Scalp cooling with hairstyle
Scalp Cooling with conditioner and water emulsion
Experimental group
Description:
Scalp cooling after coating hair with conditioner and water emulsion to minimize hair volume and increase scalp cooling cap to scalp contact
Treatment:
Device: Scalp cooling with conditioner and water emulsion
No Scalp Cooling
No Intervention group
Description:
Control with no scalp cooling

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yana Kost, BA; Beth McLellan, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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