Cardiac Changes After Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Early Stage NSCLC Cancer or Lung Metastasis

NCT ID: NCT03984019

Last Updated: 2023-05-24

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

10 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2021-01-13

Study Completion Date

2023-04-01

Brief Summary

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The investigators aim to optimize the radiation treatment of early stage lung cancer patients. Therefore, detailed understanding is needed of the type of toxicity and the location of these toxicities for patients who receive high fraction doses. These have not been measured in these patients before, therefore our primary research question is: is it possible to measure changes in cardiac condition after radiotherapy, with respect to cardiac arrhythmias, fibrosis, hemodynamic function change and pericarditis?

Detailed Description

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Rationale: For lung cancer patients that receive thoracic irradiation, cardiac toxicity was not considered to play a role, because it was expected to occur many years after treatment. However, recently several studies have shown higher death rates for lung cancer patients receiving higher cardiac doses, possibly due to cardiac toxicity. Most knowledge on cardiac toxicity that is available, is based on patients that receive conventionally fractionated radiation treatment, where the heart receives a relatively low dose of radiation. For patients that receive stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), which gives high fraction doses, the heart may receive peak doses of radiation, especially for centrally located lung tumours. This type of therapy is standard of care for early stage lung cancer patients, with very high local control that is similar to surgically treated patients. In order to improve the radiation treatment for these early stage lung cancer patients, detailed knowledge on cardiac toxicity in these patients is necessary.

Objective: the investigators aim to optimize the radiation treatment of early stage lung cancer patients. To reach that goal, detailed understanding is needed of the type of toxicity and the location on the heart of these toxicities for patients who receive high fraction doses. These have not been measured in this category of patients before, therefore our primary research question is: is it possible to measure changes in cardiac condition 3 or 12 months after radiotherapy, with respect to cardiac arrhythmias, tissue fibrosis, hemodynamic function change and pericarditis? Our secondary research question is: is it possible to measure local fibrosis and correlate this to local dose? The third research question is: is it possible to measure early cardiac morphology changes during the course of the irradiation? Study design: Twenty five patients with early stage lung cancer or a solitary lung metastasis of a solid tumour, who are treated with SBRT will be enrolled in an observational prospective cohort study and treated following standard clinical practice on a cone-beam or MR guided linear accelerator (Linac). Condition of the heart will be examined before treatment using ECG, cardiac MRI with added T1- and T2-mapping, echocardiography and blood biomarkers. These tests will be repeated 3 and 12 months after treatment.

Study population: 25 patients with a lung tumour in close proximity to the heart (edge of tumour \<3cm from the heart) will be included. All patients receive SBRT for a primary lung tumour (stage IA-IIB), or for a solitary lung metastasis of a solid tumour.

Intervention (if applicable): not applicable Main study parameters/endpoints: It will be investigated 1) if changes in cardiac condition (cardiac arrhythmias, fibrosis, hemodynamic function change and pericarditis) can be visualised and quantified. A negative change of more than 5% between pre-and post-treatment measurements is considered toxicity. 2) If local fibrosis is associated to local dose, 3) if morphology changes are visible during treatment.

Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: The patient will have 3 sessions with several diagnostic tests: ECGs, cardiac MRIs, echocardiography and blood sampling, and will fill out 3 questionnaires. Limited side effects of these tests are expected. Cardiac tests will be evaluated by a cardiologist and dedicated radiologist and reported to the radiation oncologist who will inform the patient and refer to the cardiologist if needed. The burden for these patients will be, next to the time spent for the diagnostic tests and travel time; an intravenous blood sampling and administration of MRI contrast agent. The additional time spent for diagnostic tests per session are: echo (30 min), ECG (5 min), vena puncture (5 min) and MRI (45 min) + time in the waiting room. Filling out the 3 questionnaires will take 15 min each. The possible benefit for the patient is the extensive cardiac screening. Should a problem come to light, the patient will be referred to the cardiologist.

Results from this patient cohort are directly relatable to all early stage NSCLC who are treated with SBRT, and possibly oesophageal cancer patients as well. Should this study show that cardiac dose causes cardiac toxicity in this time frame, the aim should be to improve treatment for all patients who are comparable. Ergo, patients who receive cardiac dose because of their tumour location, and who are generally unfit for surgery because of their physical condition (early stage NSCLC patients and oesophageal cancer patients).

Conditions

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Lung Cancer Stage I Lung Cancer Stage II Lung Metastases

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

This is an exploratory study to determine whether cardiac changes occur after radiation treatment. Patients are treated following standard clinical practice, with additional diagnostic investigations. The study design is therefore a cohort study.
Primary Study Purpose

SCREENING

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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A

Radiotherapy; SBRT Additional cardiac diagnostics

Group Type OTHER

Cardiac condition measurements

Intervention Type DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Cardiac MRI, ECG, echocardiography, cardiac blood markers

Interventions

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Cardiac condition measurements

Cardiac MRI, ECG, echocardiography, cardiac blood markers

Intervention Type DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Receive SBRT treatment for stage 1A-2B NSCLC or for a solitary lung metastasis of a solid tumour
* Closest distance between edge of tumor and heart \< 3 cm

Exclusion Criteria

* Pacemaker/ICD
* Renal function below GFR \<30 ml/min/1.7m2
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Dutch Cancer Society

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

The Netherlands Cancer Institute

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Jose Belderbos, MD, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

The Netherlands Cancer Institute

Locations

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Netherlands Cancer Institute

Amsterdam, , Netherlands

Site Status

Amsterdam UMC, location AMC

Amsterdam, , Netherlands

Site Status

Leids Universitair Medisch Centrum (LUMC)

Leiden, , Netherlands

Site Status

Countries

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Netherlands

Other Identifiers

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M19CCR

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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