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Functional Imaging in Lung SBRT

Functional Outcomes for Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy of Lung Lesions in High Risk Patients

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03121300
Enrollment
33
Registered
2017-04-20
Start date
2017-02-06
Completion date
2019-08-30
Last updated
2019-10-17

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

Conditions

Lung Cancer

Brief summary

Little is known about the safety of body radiation therapy (SBRT), especially the impact on pulmonary function, quality of life, and on functional changes within the lung itself. Radiation dose constraints and capturing functional changes on imaging are not well studied in this setting. The current study aims to evaluate the utility of advanced imaging to measure lung function prior to and after treatment and to assess the feasibility of using this data to adapt SBRT planning.

Detailed description

Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is becoming a new standard for unresectable lung metastases and primary lung cancers. However, it is becoming increasingly common for patients to undergo multiple courses of lung SBRT to synchronous and/or metachronous lung lesions. Further, the indications for SBRT are being expanded to patients who have very poor pulmonary function such as FEV1 \< 0.5 L or DLCO \< 35% predicted, who have large tumors (\>3 cm), or who have centrally located lesions that abut great vessels and mainstem bronchi. Little is known about the safety of such treatments, especially the impact on pulmonary function, quality of life, and on functional changes within the lung itself. Radiation dose constraints and capturing functional changes on imaging are not well studied in this setting. The current study aims to evaluate the utility of advanced imaging to measure lung function prior to and after treatment and to assess the feasibility of using this data to adapt SBRT planning. SPECT/CT will be used to measure ventilation and perfusion changes while. CT ventilation scans will be used to correlate functional changes observed on diagnostic SPECT/CT. Dynamic contrast enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) will also be used to explore local vascular changes in the treated tumor. In patients whose tumors lie close to the heart, cardiac MRI will be used to investigate whether high doses of radiation per fraction are associated with changes in cardiac function. These imaging modalities may be used to potentially predict toxicity and patient response with the ultimate goal of prospectively adapt dose to individual patient and tumor characteristics. Lung function prior to and post-treatment will also be measured as a correlate of functional imaging changes. Identifying areas of the lung that are sub-functional or low-functioning may offer an opportunity to adapt stereotactic ablations that spare functional lung thereby making SBRT treatments to higher risk patients safer.

Interventions

OTHERCT Scan

Quantitative lung SPECT-CT

OTHERLung CT

CT lung ventilation

OTHERMRI

DCE MRI

6 minute hall walk test

OTHERSGRQ

St. George Respiratory Questionnaire

OTHERBiological Sample Collection

Blood Draw

OTHERToxicity

Toxicity Evaluation

Cardiac MRI Scan

Sponsors

Department of Health and Human Services
CollaboratorFED
University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
OTHER
Time perspective
CROSS_SECTIONAL

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Patients receiving SBRT lung treatment and who have any one of the following high risk features: * Lung lesion \> 5 cm * DLCO \< 35% * FEV1 \< 0.5 L * Central lung tumors (defined as within 2 cm from the proximal bronchial tree) * Tumors that abut the great vessels, trachea, spinal cord, or esophagus * Prior lobectomy or pneumonectomy * Prior lung radiation (SBRT or conventional definitive lung radiation) * Patients must be 18 years of age or older

Exclusion criteria

* Patients who have received targeted agents or systemic potentially radiosensitizing chemotherapy within 2 weeks of lung SBRT start * Pregnancy or lactation * Unable to tolerate MRI without anesthesia * Inability cooperate with the scans

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Longitudinal Changes in Lung FunctionFrom baseline to 6 months post Radiation TreatmentTo characterize longitudinal changes in lung function using SPECT/CT and CT ventilation scans in high risk patients undergoing standard SBRT treatments.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Dosimetric Predictors to Assess Changes in ToxicityFrom baseline to 6 months post Radiation TreatmentTo explore radiation dosimetric predictors and correlates of SPECT-CT and CT ventilation functional imaging that predict toxicity in these patients.
Changes in SPECT-CT Correlate with Changes in CT VentilationFrom baseline to 6 months post Radiation TreatmentTo determine if early functional changes in SPECT-CT correlate with changes in CT ventilation, pulmonary function and patient reported decrements in lung function on the St. George Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ).
To Assess Early Vascular Changes Using DCE-MRIFrom baseline to 6 months post Radiation TreatmentTo assess early vascular changes using DCE-MRI in the lung tumor treated with SBRT as a possible predictor of tumor response.

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Changes in Cardiac FunctionFrom baseline to 6 months post Radiation TreatmentTo explore if SBRT tumors that lie within 2 cm of the heart cause any changes in cardiac function on cardiac MRI

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

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