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Breast and Melanoma Trial With Lymphoseek to Identify Lymph Nodes

A Phase 3, Prospective, Open-Label, Multicenter Comparison Study of Lymphoseek® and Vital Blue Dye as Lymphoid Tissue Targeting Agents in Patients With Known Melanoma or Breast Cancer Who Are Undergoing Lymph Node Mapping

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01106040
Enrollment
163
Registered
2010-04-19
Start date
2010-06-30
Completion date
2011-04-30
Last updated
2013-06-17

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Breast Cancer, Melanoma

Keywords

Lymphoseek, Breast Cancer, Melanoma, Experimental

Brief summary

Data from this pivotal clinical trial will be used to support a marketing application (i.e., NDA) of Navidea's Lymphoseek for use in anatomical delineation of lymphoid tissue (nodes) in the lymphatic pathway draining the primary site of a tumor. Multicenter, open-label, within-patient comparative study of Lymphoseek and vital blue dye in the detection of excised lymph nodes in patients with known melanoma and breast cancer. All patients will receive a single dose of 50 µg Lymphoseek radiolabeled with 0.5 or 2.0 mCi Tc 99m and vital blue dye.

Detailed description

In patients with primary melanoma and breast cancer, lymph node status is often a strong predictor of outcome and influences the course of treatment a patient may follow after surgery. In an effort to reduce the morbidity and costs of detection of lymph node metastases, surgical oncologists have developed a method by which the sentinel lymph node (SLN; the first node in a draining basin) is identified intraoperatively and removed. This technique, called sentinel node biopsy, has extremely high negative predictive values for melanoma metastases and breast cancer metastases. The two largest trials for melanoma, Morton, et al (2005) and Rossi, et al (2006), reported false negative rates of 6.3% and 14.7%, respectively. Morton, et al (2006), in perhaps the most mature trial reported to date, showed a false negative rate of 3.4%. There is growing evidence that sentinel node biopsy will have a significant impact on the management of melanoma. Sentinel node biopsy also has extremely high negative predictive values for breast cancer metastases; the false-negative rates range from 0% to 9%. There is growing evidence that sentinel node biopsy will have a significant impact on the management of breast cancer. Although the survival and local recurrence studies have yet to be completed, the technique has emerged into common practice. Intraoperative lymphatic mapping (ILM) with a radiopharmaceutical is a nuclear medicine examination which identifies for the surgeon the first lymph node to receive lymphatic flow from the primary tumor site. This node is removed and analyzed for the presence of malignant cells. By locating the lymph node prior to surgery, a small incision can be used to remove the node and a smaller dissection can be employed. The high negative predictive value of the technique seems to provide an accurate staging procedure and may spare patients who are lymph node negative the morbidity of a complete lymph node dissection. Consequently, staging of melanoma by lymph node mapping and biopsy may be equivalent to regional node dissection without the attendant post surgical morbidity. An ideal lymph node imaging agent would exhibit rapid clearance from the injection site, rapid uptake and high retention within the first draining lymph node, and low uptake by the remaining lymph nodes. The ideal agent would also have low radiation absorption; high biological safety; convenient, rapid, and stable technetium-99m labeling; and biochemical purity. Lymphoseek (Technetium Tc 99m diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid mannosyl dextran, \[Tc 99m\] DTPA Mannosyl Dextran) is a radiotracer that accumulates in lymphatic tissue by binding to a mannose binding protein that resides on the surface of dendritic cells and macrophages. Lymphoseek is a macromolecule consisting of multiple units of DTPA and mannose, each synthetically attached to a 10 kilodalton dextran backbone. The mannose acts as a substrate for the receptor, and the DTPA serves as a chelating agent for labeling with Tc 99m. Lymphoseek has a diameter of about 5 nm, which is substantially smaller than current agents used for targeting lymphoid tissue. Lymphoseek's small diameter permits enhanced diffusion into lymph nodes and blood capillaries, resulting in a rapid injection site clearance. Upon entry into the blood, the agent binds to receptors in the liver or is filtered by the kidney and accumulates in the urinary bladder.

Interventions

The total volume of Lymphoseek injection will be between 0.1 - 1.0 mL.

Sponsors

Navidea Biopharmaceuticals
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. The patient has provided written informed consent with HIPAA authorization. 2. The patient is a candidate for surgical intervention, with lymph node mapping being a part of the surgical plan. 3. The patient is at least 18 years of age at the time of consent. 4. The patient has an ECOG performance status of Grade 0 - 2 (see Appendix A). 5. The patient has a clinical negative node status at the time of study entry (i.e. T0-4, N0, M0, see Appendix D and E). 6. If of childbearing potential, the patient has a negative pregnancy test within 72 hours prior to administration of Lymphoseek, has been surgically sterilized, or has been postmenopausal for at least 1 year. Melanoma Patients 7. The patient has a diagnosis of primary melanoma. Breast Cancer Patients 8. The patient has a diagnosis of primary breast cancer. 9. Patients with pure ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or non-invasive carcinoma if lymph node biopsy is part of the surgical plan.

Exclusion criteria

1. The patient is pregnant or lactating. 2. The patient has clinical or radiological evidence of metastatic cancer including palpably abnormal or enlarged lymph nodes (i.e., all patients should be any T,N0,M0, see Appendix D and E). 3. The patient has a known hypersensitivity to Lymphazurin. 4. The patient has participated in another investigational drug study within 30 days of scheduled surgery. Melanoma Patients 5. The patient has a tumor with a Breslow depth less than 0.75mm. 6. Patient has had preoperative chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or radiation therapy. 7. Patient has been diagnosed with a prior invasive melanoma that would occur on the same body region or potentially draining to the same nodal basin or patients with truncal or extremity primary melanoma who has had a prior breast cancer potentially draining to the same axillary nodal basin. 8. Patient has undergone node basin surgery of any type or radiation to the nodal basin(s) potentially draining the primary melanoma. 9. Patient has undergone a wide excision for their primary melanoma (\>1 cm in dimension) or complex reconstruction (rotation, free flap, or skin graft of any type). Breast Cancer Patients 10. The patient has bilateral primary breast cancers or multiple tumors within their breast. 11. Patient has had prior surgical procedures such as breast implants, reduction mammoplasty, or axillary surgery. 12. Patient is scheduled for bilateral mastectomy unless for cosmetic reasons and the contraindicated breast will not undergo lymph node mapping. 13. Patient has had preoperative radiation therapy to the affected breast or axilla.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Concordance of Blue Dye and LymphoseekSurgery after injections of Lymphoseek and blue dyeThe proportion of lymph nodes detected intraoperatively by blue dye that were also detected by Lymphoseek.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Reverse Concordance of Blue Dye and LymphoseekSurgery after injections of Lymphoseek and blue dyeThe proportion of lymph nodes detected intraoperatively by Lymphoseek that were also detected by blue dye.

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Lymphoseek
Enrolled patients who were administered any injection of Lymphoseek.
153
Total153

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicLymphoseek
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
0 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
52 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
101 Participants
Age Continuous59.3 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 12.4
Region of Enrollment
United States
153 participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
104 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
49 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
— / —
other
Total, other adverse events
0 / 153
serious
Total, serious adverse events
8 / 153

Outcome results

Primary

Concordance of Blue Dye and Lymphoseek

The proportion of lymph nodes detected intraoperatively by blue dye that were also detected by Lymphoseek.

Time frame: Surgery after injections of Lymphoseek and blue dye

Population: All enrolled patients who were injected with both Lymphoseek and blue dye, who underwent surgery and had at least one lymph node stained intraoperatively by blue dye, and for whom the tissue type (lymphatic/non-lymphatic) and pathology status (presence/absence of tumor cells) was confirmed.

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
Intent-To-TreatConcordance of Blue Dye and Lymphoseek1.0000 Proportion of Lymph Nodes
Secondary

Reverse Concordance of Blue Dye and Lymphoseek

The proportion of lymph nodes detected intraoperatively by Lymphoseek that were also detected by blue dye.

Time frame: Surgery after injections of Lymphoseek and blue dye

Population: All enrolled patients who were injected with both Lymphoseek and blue dye, who underwent surgery and had at least one lymph node detected by Lymphoseek (at ≥ 3σ count) in vivo, and for whom the tissue type (lymphatic/non-lymphatic) and pathology status (presence/absence of tumor cells) was confirmed.

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
Intent-To-TreatReverse Concordance of Blue Dye and Lymphoseek0.6058 Proportion of Lymph Nodes

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026