Evaluation of Explanted Lungs by MRI and Biological Assays

NCT ID: NCT06012500

Last Updated: 2026-01-07

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

RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

100 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-04-14

Study Completion Date

2027-12-30

Brief Summary

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The purpose of this multi-centered, NIH-sponsored study is to to develop an optimal protocol for using non-invasive 129Xe gas exchange MRI to detect changing disease activity in interstitial lung diseases (ILDs). We base this study on the demonstrated promise of 129Xe as a biomarker for both prognosis and therapy response, overwhelming interest from both industry and academic partners, and impending FDA approval for 129Xe ventilation MRI. This requires disseminating standardized and repeatable methods for 3D 129Xe functional MRI in order to facilitate innovative multi-center observational and interventional trials that can advance our understanding of fibrotic lung disease, while accelerating the development of novel therapies.

Detailed Description

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There remains an urgent need to better phenotype interstitial lung diseases, predict trajectories, monitor progression, and measure treatment response. Because ILD pathology is spatially and temporarly heterogeneous, the problem demands a 3-dimensional (3D) lung assessment. To this end, CT imaging patterns are critical in IPF diagnosis, but such structural imaging is insensitive to changing functional status. Thus, we have developed hyperpolarized (HP) 129Xe MRI, whose unique properties enable rapid, non-invasive, 3D functional assessment of inhaled gas distribu-tion in the airspaces, as well as its uptake in the pulmonary interstitium (barrier tissues) and trans-fer to the pulmonary capillary red blood cells (RBCs). This way of probing regional gas exchange confers sensitivity to micron-scale interstitial barrier thickening and locally diminished RBC trans-fer. We have used 129Xe MRI to predict outcomes such as death or the need for transplant and have provided preliminary evidence showing that barrier uptake is a sensitive and early marker of therapy response. These advancements have led to demands for wider dissemination, which drives an urgent need to harmonize acquisition protocols and quantification methods.

This work will be conducted by 4 collaborating centers - Duke University, the University of Cin-cinnati, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, and the University of Wisconsin. Cincin-nati Children's will operate under its own IRB protocol and IND, but each will share data and im-aging techniques in order to establish best practices. The specific aims of the work are:

Aim 1 - Maximize and Measure Repeatability of 129Xe MRI/MRS Metrics across MRI Platforms. We will improve upon published repeatability of ±15-20% by harmonizing MRI/MRS protocols by improved coaching, optimized dose delivery, and tailoring the inhaled dose volume to the individ-ual patient. Using these approaches, each center will demonstrate coefficients of repeatability of ±6% or better in patients with ILD.

Aim 2 - Establish Harmonized Quantitative Analysis of Gas Exchange MRI/MRS. We will deploy a reconstruction and analysis package enabling users of any of three major MRI vendor plat-forms to obtain robust, real-time quantitative analysis of images and spectra. We will demon-strate that healthy reference cohorts are equivalent to ±10% across 4 centers and use this to build the definitive multi-site healthy reference distributions.

Aim 3 - Deploy a Clinical Framework to Identify Active Fibrosis and Normal Aging. To position the technology for clinical deployment and interpretation, we will develop a physiologic model incorporating ventilation, barrier and RBC metrics to explain the underlying factors responsible for a given patient's diffusing capacity (DLCO) and transfer coefficient (KCO). This framework will be deployed to readers who will differentiate ILD from normal aging.

The expected outcomes are to 1) deploy robust and standardized acquisition and analysis proto-cols across centers and scanner platforms, 2) establish the methods and standards for maximiz-ing repeatability of each gas exchange imaging metric, and 3) provide the tools and framework needed to use 129Xe MRI to characterize disease and assess therapeutic efficacy. Collectively, this program will enable rapid and innovative trials that will accelerate progress in studying and treating fibrotic lung disease. While this technical development study is focused on healthy sub-jects and those with ILD, deployment of these non-invasive MRI methods should benefit the study of interstitial lung disease more broadly, as well as other conditions of gas exchange im-pairment such as pulmonary vascular disease, COPD, and COVID-19.

Conditions

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ILD

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

CASE_ONLY

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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Control

Healthy Controls

Xenon-129

Intervention Type DRUG

Inhaled contrast for MRI

ILD

Participants with diagnosed ILD

Xenon-129

Intervention Type DRUG

Inhaled contrast for MRI

Interventions

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Xenon-129

Inhaled contrast for MRI

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Outpatients of either gender, age \> 18
2. Willing and able to give informed consent and adhere to visit/protocol schedules (Consent must be given before any study procedures are performed.)
3. Clinical diagnosis of Interstitial Lung Disease made by a board certified pulmonologist us-ing established criteria. We will not exclude individuals based on ILD type or severity of disease with the exception of the below criteria

Exclusion Criteria

1. Subject is less than 18 years old
2. MRI is contraindicated based on responses to MRI screening questionnaire
3. Subject is pregnant or lactating
4. Resting oxygen saturation on room air \<90%
5. Respiratory illness of a bacterial or viral etiology within 30 days of MRI
6. Subject has history of any known ventricular cardiac arrhythmia
7. Subject has history of cardiac arrest within the last year
8. Subject does not fit into 129Xe vest coil used for MRI
9. Subject cannot hold his/her breath for 15 seconds
10. Subject deemed unlikely to be able to comply with instructions during imaging
11. Medical or psychological conditions which, in the opinion of the investigator, might create undue risk to the subject or interfere with the subject's ability to comply with the protocol requirements
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

99 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Jason Woods, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati

Locations

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Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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United States

Central Contacts

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Ashley Bordon, MS

Role: CONTACT

513-636-0143

Jason Woods, PhD

Role: CONTACT

513-803-4463

Facility Contacts

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Jason Woods, PhD

Role: primary

5138034463

Jason Woods, PhD

Role: backup

513-803-4463

Other Identifiers

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2021-0031

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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