Phase 1/2 Study of ThermoDox With Approved Hyperthermia in Treatment of Breast Cancer Recurrence at the Chest Wall
NCT ID: NCT00826085
Last Updated: 2017-01-30
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE1/PHASE2
17 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-02-28
2016-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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For initial curative intent in LRR, available interventions include surgical resection in patients whose tumor and clinical status permits anesthesia and surgical removal, radiation therapy in patients whose tumor and clinical status permits additional radiation, systemic hormonal and/or cytotoxic chemotherapy in patients whose tumors are sensitive to such drugs and combinations of the aforementioned. For unresectable LRR tumors, radiation and chemotherapy are used to manage the disease. In this setting some success has been achieved; however, a patient who reoccurs following these treatments is often treated with palliative intent.
Diathermy refers to the therapeutic generation of local heat in body tissues by high-frequency electromagnetic radiation, electric currents, or ultrasonic waves. In mild hyperthermia local tissue temperatures are restricted to a range of 39-45°C. Two types of external devices, microwave systems and ultrasound systems, have been approved by the FDA for delivering mild hyperthermia to the chest wall.
Mild hyperthermia from either microwave or ultrasound devices has been used safely in breast cancer treatment. In conjunction with external beam radiation, both types of devices have been used to heat the chest wall and both devices have demonstrated enhanced effects when compared to radiation therapy without additional hyperthermia.
Doxorubicin hydrochloride is a cytotoxic anthracycline antibiotic. The recommended single-agent dose of doxorubicin HCl (Adriamycin®) for injection is 60 to 75 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) in three-week cycles. Acute myelosuppression and long term, cumulative, cardiotoxicity (congestive heart failure) are dose-limiting. Doxorubicin is active against breast cancer as a single agent and is used with other drugs in multi-agent chemotherapy regimens. In LRR breast cancer, single agent doxorubicin achieves response rates comparable to combination chemotherapy.
Lyso-thermosensitive liposomal doxorubicin (ThermoDox®) is a temperature sensitive liposomal drug delivery system that selectively accumulates in tumors as a result of their leaky vasculature. During ThermoDox/hyperthermia therapy, the tumor is heated locally while the rest of the body remains at a normal temperature. When the liposomes encounter a temperature of 39.5°C or above, they release doxorubicin locally into the heated area. Liposomal doxorubicin is administered intravenously and, because it is particulate, will eventually be removed from circulation by the reticuloendothelial system in the liver and spleen. Pharmacokinetic data from liver cancer patients treated with radiofrequency ablation (RFA) and ThermoDox show that the major portion of exposure to ThermoDox (about 95% of the liposomal doxorubicin plasma AUC0-∞) occurs during the first six hours following the infusion, establishing this time period as optimal for application of hyperthermia. Animal studies have repeatedly shown higher tumor doxorubicin concentrations and enhanced tumor cell killing when ThermoDox is combined with hyperthermia compared to doxorubicin without hyperthermia.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Thermodox in combination with hyperthermia
Single arm study
ThermoDox in combination with Microwave Hyperthermia (heat)
ThermoDox is a 30 minute intravenous infusion followed by hyperthermia within 60 minutes of infusion completion.
Hyperthermia is a therapy used to heat tumors for 60 minutes. Using heat energy, the tumor is heated to a certain temperature. The heat can damage cancer cells at levels that are usually safe for normal cells and can be used to attack cancer in four major ways: 1) heat damages or weakens the cells of the tumor; 2) heat increase blood flow through the weakened tumor; 3) increased blood flow raises oxygen levels in tumors; and 4) when the body senses fever it can stimulate the nature immune system.
All patients will receive up to six ThermoDox/hyperthermia treatments at 21-day intervals.
Interventions
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ThermoDox in combination with Microwave Hyperthermia (heat)
ThermoDox is a 30 minute intravenous infusion followed by hyperthermia within 60 minutes of infusion completion.
Hyperthermia is a therapy used to heat tumors for 60 minutes. Using heat energy, the tumor is heated to a certain temperature. The heat can damage cancer cells at levels that are usually safe for normal cells and can be used to attack cancer in four major ways: 1) heat damages or weakens the cells of the tumor; 2) heat increase blood flow through the weakened tumor; 3) increased blood flow raises oxygen levels in tumors; and 4) when the body senses fever it can stimulate the nature immune system.
All patients will receive up to six ThermoDox/hyperthermia treatments at 21-day intervals.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Subjects with ulcerative chest wall disease defined as non-healing wounds consistent with cancer are eligible.
* Subjects with prior skin changes consistent with inflammatory breast carcinoma are eligible.
* Breast carcinoma for medical reasons not being resected
2. Tumor thickness must be clinically indicated for hyperthermia therapy, as measured by clinical exam or imaging studies (CT or MRI). The target local tumor lesion(s) must be able to be covered within two hyperthermia fields of treatment.
3. Disease that has progressed despite other available standard treatment options, based on what is clinically indicated according to the investigator's clinical and medical judgment, including:
* One or more radiation treatment(s) to the chest wall or breast up to a maximum prior dose of 12,000 cGy in the hyperthermia field (not administered less than 28 days prior to enrollment).
4. Subjects who have previously received hyperthermia in conjunction with either radiation therapy or chemotherapy are eligible.
5. Subjects may have distant metastasis, including brain metastases. Subjects with known brain metastases are eligible if:
* They have received standard anti-tumor treatment for their brain metastases without encephalopathy;
* Their neurological function is stable for at least 30 days and either off steroid therapy or on a stable steroid regimen.
6. Non-pregnant female at least 18 years of age. If the subject is of child-bearing age, must have a negative serum pregnancy test at baseline and must agree to practice an acceptable form of birth control while on the study.
7. Provide written informed consent and willing to comply with protocol requirements.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Prior confirmed allergic reaction (including moderate rash, dyspnea, wheezing, urticaria or other symptoms) attributed to the administration of either anthracyclines or other liposomally encapsulated drugs that required discontinuation of prior therapy.
3. Prior therapy with anthracyclines exceeding the following doses (subjects will be discontinued at 600 mg/m2 lifetime dose irrespective of the number of ThermoDox® cycles received):
Free (i.e., non-liposomal) or liposomal doxorubicin \> 450 mg/m2 Free epirubicin \> 900 mg/m2.
4. Previous (required active treatment within 5 years) or concomitant malignancy except basal cell cancer, in situ carcinoma of the cervix, or contralateral breast cancer. Subjects with a prior contralateral breast malignancy can be included if they did not receive any chemotherapy.
5. Baseline laboratories (repeat labs can be evaluated at baseline to establish eligibility):
* ANC Granulocytes \< 1,500/ microliter
* Platelets \< 75,000/ microliter
* Hemoglobin \< 9 gm/dL
* Total Bilirubin \> 2 mg/dL
* ALT and AST \> 2.5 X upper limit of normal
* Creatinine \> 1.5 X upper limit of normal.
6. ECOG/Zubrod Performance Status \> 2.
7. MUGA/Echocardiogram Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction \< 50%.
8. Has a medical or psychiatric condition or other circumstances which would significantly decrease the chances of obtaining reliable data, achieving study objectives, or completing the study and/or post-dose follow-up examinations.
9. History of:
* Acute coronary syndrome
* Cerebral vascular accident
* Abnormal cardiac stress testing within last 6 months
* Symptomatic coronary artery disease
* Uncontrolled hypertension or cardiomyopathy
* Cardiac valvular surgery or open heart surgery
* Known structural heart disease.
10. Has a condition which may interfere with the hyperthermia portion of the trial such as: functioning cardiac pacemaker; metal plates, rods or prosthesis of the chest wall, breast reconstruction with implants, severe numbness and/or tingling of the chest wall or breast, skin grafts and/or flaps on the breast or chest wall.
11. Active infection requiring antibiotic treatment
12. Has received any external radiation therapy within 28 days prior to enrollment.
18 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Imunon
INDUSTRY
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Nicholas Borys, MD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Imunon
Locations
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University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, California, United States
Southeastern Regional Medical Center
Newnan, Georgia, United States
University of Maryland
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Washington University in St. Louis
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Southwestern Regional Medical Center
Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Eastern Regional Medical Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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References
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Zagar TM, Vujaskovic Z, Formenti S, Rugo H, Muggia F, O'Connor B, Myerson R, Stauffer P, Hsu IC, Diederich C, Straube W, Boss MK, Boico A, Craciunescu O, Maccarini P, Needham D, Borys N, Blackwell KL, Dewhirst MW. Two phase I dose-escalation/pharmacokinetics studies of low temperature liposomal doxorubicin (LTLD) and mild local hyperthermia in heavily pretreated patients with local regionally recurrent breast cancer. Int J Hyperthermia. 2014 Aug;30(5):285-94. doi: 10.3109/02656736.2014.936049.
Other Identifiers
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105-08-201
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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