Phase I-II Clinical Study of Taurine for External Use in the Prevention and Treatment of Acute Radiation Skin Injury

NCT ID: NCT06847555

Last Updated: 2025-02-26

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

Clinical Phase

PHASE1/PHASE2

Total Enrollment

24 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-05-25

Study Completion Date

2027-09-25

Brief Summary

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Acute radiation skin injury is the most common side effect of radiation therapy in patients with chest tumors, which can be manifested as erythema, dry peeling, wet peeling, and severe ulcers.

Even with current advanced radiotherapy techniques, such as intensity-modulated reverse radiation therapy (IMRT), about one-third of patients develop grade 2 or higher skin damage during radiotherapy. Radiation skin damage can cause discomfort to patients, thus affecting their daily life and reducing their quality of life. In severe cases, it can even reduce the efficacy due to prolonged treatment time. Therefore, prevention and treatment of acute radiation skin injury is a difficult problem to be solved urgently in clinical practice.

Even with current advanced radiotherapy techniques, such as intensity-modulated reverse radiation therapy (IMRT), about one-third of patients develop grade 2 or higher skin damage during radiotherapy. Radiation skin damage can cause discomfort to patients, thus affecting their daily life and reducing their quality of life. In severe cases, it can even reduce the efficacy due to prolonged treatment time. Therefore, prevention and treatment of acute radiation skin injury is a difficult problem to be solved urgently in clinical practice.

From previous studies, we found that taurine is an active substance that regulates normal physiological activities of the body and is widely distributed in various tissues and organs of the body. This substance has many advantages. Many previous studies have shown that taurine also has a wide range of biological functions such as anti-inflammatory, analgesic, maintaining osmotic pressure balance, improving visual function, regulating blood sugar, nerve conduction, endocrine activity, regulating lipid digestion and absorption, increasing cardiac contractility, improving immunity, enhancing cell membrane antioxidant capacity, protecting myocardial cells, etc.

Considering the multiple medical values of taurine and its safety, we intend to conduct a phase I-II clinical study of taurine for external use in the prevention and treatment of acute radiation skin injury for radiation skin injury, with the study period from January 25,2024 to January 25,2027. The purpose is to evaluate the safety of taurine in the prevention and treatment of acute radiation skin injury in breast cancer patients after adjuvant radiotherapy. Possible benefits: Reduce the incidence and severity of radiation skin damage.

Detailed Description

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Conditions

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To Evaluate the Safety of Taurine in Preventing Acute Radiation Skin Injury Induced by Adjuvant Radiotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Taurine solution ARM

Taurine solution was sprayed to the irradiated area three times a day from 1 day before the start of radiotherapy to 2 weeks after the end of radiotherapy. It is important to spray each time freshly prepared and at a fixed time each morning, noon and evening to ensure continuous contact between the drug and the skin.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Radiation

Intervention Type RADIATION

Tumor radiotherapy is a method of treating malignant tumors by using radioactive rays such as alpha, beta, gamma rays produced by radioactive isotopes and x-rays, electron rays, proton beams and other particle beams produced by various x-ray therapy machines or accelerators.

Interventions

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Radiation

Tumor radiotherapy is a method of treating malignant tumors by using radioactive rays such as alpha, beta, gamma rays produced by radioactive isotopes and x-rays, electron rays, proton beams and other particle beams produced by various x-ray therapy machines or accelerators.

Intervention Type RADIATION

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Breast cancer patients scheduled for conventional fractionated adjuvant
* radiotherapy.
* 18 years or older
* ECOG score 0-1
* No previous history of other neoplasms.
* No previous chest radiotherapy.
* Heart, lung function, liver function and kidney function were within normal range.
* Voluntary informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria

* Pregnant or lactating women, women in childbearing years who do not use effective contraception;
* Patients with mental disease or nervous system disease, unable to clearly describe treatment response (such as cerebrovascular accident sequela);
* Those who have serious heart, liver, kidney and other organ diseases or diabetes and are not expected to complete the treatment plan;
* serious, uncontrolled diseases and infections;
* Pregnant or lactating patients.
* Allergic to taurine and any of its components.
* Has participated in other clinical trials.
* knot tissue disease
* active hepatitis
* Obvious diseases that the investigator considers should be excluded from this study
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Shandong Cancer Hospital and Institute

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Han Xi Zhao

Deputy Chief Physician

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Shandong Cancer Hospital

Jinan, Shandong, China

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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China

Facility Contacts

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Hanxi Zhao, MD

Role: primary

86-531-67626996

Other Identifiers

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GTEBC-2024

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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