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Multi-site Validation and Application of a Consensus DSC-MRI Protocol

Multi-site Validation and Application of a Consensus Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (DSC-MRI) Protocol

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03401866
Enrollment
80
Registered
2018-01-17
Start date
2018-02-28
Completion date
2021-07-31
Last updated
2018-01-17

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

Conditions

Glioblastoma Multiforme, Gliosarcoma

Keywords

brain tumor

Brief summary

This clinical trial is to validate and demonstrate the clinical usefulness of a protocol for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in people with high grade glioma brain tumors.

Detailed description

Although DSC-MRI itself is not novel, the consensus protocol tested herein is newly developed in response to a stated need by federal agencies (FDA, NCI) for standardization of imaging endpoints, including perfusion-weighted MRI, in multi-center clinical trials of GBM therapies. Through use of stereotactic methodologies that have been used to demonstrate that rCBV(relative cerebral blood flow) and FTB(fractional tumor burden) measures made by the consensus DSC-MRI protocol are concordant with tissue histology, this multi-site trial will be the first to validate a consensus DSC-MRI protocol on multiple platforms representing all major MRI scanner manufacturers. The trial also formally compares two contrast agent dosing schemes proposed in the consensus protocol, a single-dose BTIP-compliant scheme and a double-dose scheme. Such a comparison has never been tested in patients before, and addresses a longstanding controversy regarding contrast agent administration and dosing for DSC-MRI. Successful validation of the consensus DSC-MRI protocol will likely shift clinical practice paradigms. To date, the widespread adoption of DSC-MRI has been limited by inconsistent published methodologies, rCBV thresholds, and impact on clinical decision making. This trial seeks to improve confidence in DSCMRI methodology as it will foster its adoption for multicenter trials, facilitating the development and testing of novel therapeutic agents and treatment strategies for GBM, and shift clinical practice paradigms by providing strong evidence to support the inclusion of DSC-MRI in established response assessment criteria (i.e., modified RANO).

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTDSC-MRI

The multiple dose protocol with sequential DSC-MRI scans enables comparison of BTIP compliant and double-dose injections schemes.

Sponsors

St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center, Phoenix
Lead SponsorOTHER

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

* Histologically proven intracranial glioblastoma or gliosarcoma at initial surgery * Patient is currently being treated with standard first-line therapy for glioblastoma/gliosarcoma * Karnofsky performance status ≥ 70 * Age ≥ 18 years * Women must not be pregnant or breast-feeding as gadolinium enhanced MRI is contra-indicated * Progressive contrast enhancement (\> 25% increase in contrast enhancing volume compared to nadir, not corresponding to a region of peri-operative infarct seen on immediate post-op MRI) identified on routine surveillance MRI, with plan for surgical biopsy/resection. Measurable enhancement is defined as two perpendicular in-plane diameters of at least 10 mm and at least 10 mm in the 3rd orthogonal direction. This must be the patient's initial recurrence. * Intratumoral hemorrhage (acute, subacute, or chronic) as seen on hemosiderin-sensitive (gradient-echo) MRI may preclude patient inclusion because of anticipated limited evaluation due to magnetic susceptibility artifact on the heavily T2\*-weighted DSC-MRI images. If the region of enhancing tumor not affected by blooming artifact on the hemosiderin-sensitive images does not meet the 10 x 10 x 10 mm measurable enhancement threshold specified elsewhere, the patient is ineligible. * Patients must be able to tolerate brain MRI scans with dynamic intravenous gadolinium-based contrast agent injections * No known allergy-like reaction to gadolinium or moderate or severe allergic reactions to one or more allergens as defined by the American College of Radiology (ACR); * Weight compatible with limits imposed by the MRI scanner table.

Exclusion criteria

* Does not meet inclusion criteria

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Histologic measures of tumor fraction1 dayApply fractional tumor burden (FTB) rCBV thresholding methods to quantify recurrent tumor burden and compare this against histopathologic tumor burden from corresponding surgical specimens.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Determine the repeatability of rCBV measured with the consensus DSC-MRI protocol.1 weekThe repeatability of rCBV measured with the consensus DSC-MRI protocol will be quantified using the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC).
Determine overall survival (OS) in recurrent GBM patients.3 yearsfollow up for up to 3 years post enrollment

Countries

United States

Contacts

Primary ContactChad Quarles, PhD
Chad.Quarles@barrowneuro.org602-406-3484

Outcome results

None listed

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