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Kypho-IORT: Intraoperative Radiotherapy During Kyphoplasty for Spinal Metastases

Kypho-IORT: Phase II Study for Dose Escalation of Intraoperative Radiotherapy During Kyphoplasty for Spinal Metastases

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01280032
Acronym
Kypho-IORT
Enrollment
18
Registered
2011-01-20
Start date
2011-01-31
Completion date
2013-07-31
Last updated
2022-07-22

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

Conditions

Tumors

Keywords

intraoperative radiotherapy, kyphoplasty, spinal metastases

Brief summary

Vertebral column is the most prevalent location of bone metastases. Besides axial pain, vertebral metastases cause pathological fracture and neurological dysfunction by spinal cord compression. Although the median overall survival of patients with bone metastases is only 7-9 month, half of them live longer and will require palliative treatment for their symptoms. Treatment options are radiotherapy and /or surgical treatment such as laminectomy, vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty. Various studies have shown the superiority of postoperative external beam radiotherapy after kyphoplasty in spinal metastases compared to surgery or radiotherapy alone. Nevertheless postoperative radiation schedules last 2-4 weeks. Moreover many patients present visceral and bone metastases simultaneously and require urgent systemic therapy. However, due to potentiated toxicity, concurrent therapy with full dose chemotherapy and radiotherapy is rarely possible. The investigators have therefore established a novel method for intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) during kyphoplasty which enables immediate stability, sterilization of the metastasis and immediate initiation of chemotherapy. The kyphoplasty itself is performed according to the standard procedure with some minor modifications. In short under general anaesthesia, a bipedicular approach into the affected vertebra is chosen with insertion of specially designed metallic sleeves to guide the electron drift tube of the miniature X-ray generator (INTRABEAM®). To perform the IORT during a kyphoplasty with this device a new applicator was designed. This sterile applicator consists of a plastic head, which is needed to attach it to the X-ray source and a stainless steel tube. This tube protects the probe from bending. Under fluoroscopic guidance the applicator including the drift tube is guided through the metallic sleeves in the vertebral body. A dose of 8 Gy in 5 mm distance is delivered. After IORT the INTRABEAM system is removed. The kyphoplasty balloon is inflated and PMMA-cement is injected. Afterwards the sleeves are removed and the wound is closed as usual. Aim of this study is the definition of the maximum tolerable dose (MTD) for IORT during a kyphoplasty using specific MTD-criteria and evaluating the effectiveness of this combined treatment procedure. To determine the MTD 3 levels with increasing doses are planned: 8 Gy in 5 mm distance, 8 Gy in 8 mm distance and 8 Gy in 10 mm distance.

Interventions

intraoperative radiotherapy (8 Gy) during kyphoplasty for spinal metatsases

Sponsors

Universitätsmedizin Mannheim
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* ≥ 50 years * Karnofsky Index ≥ 60 * histological or by imaging proven spinal metastases (2 cm diameter as the upper limit) inferior TH 3, which are accessible for kyphoplasty * written informed consent obtained * use of adequate contraceptive method by female patients of reproductive potential to minimize risk of pregnancy

Exclusion criteria

* uncontrolled intercurrent medical disorder - including but not limited to ongoing or active infection (including infections in the area of the treated spinal segment, for example, spondylitis / osteomyelitis / skin infections) or mental illness / social situation which affect the compliance of study requirements * prior radiation of the same vertebra * patients could not receive anaesthesia or surgery for medical reasons * history of coagulation disorder associated with bleeding * existing contraindications for MRI- or CT-scans * pregnant or breast-feeding women

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
side effect of IORT using defined MTD criteria: dysfunction of wound healing, infections, osteoradionecrosis, nerve and spinal cord damage, pathological fracture within 90 days5 years

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Efficacy defined by CT or MR-imaging and / or clinical relapses / progress and pain5 years

Countries

Germany

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 8, 2026