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Do Skin Markings Reflect the Location of the Surgical Cavity During Daily Radiotherapy Treatment?

2 de setembro de 2015 atualizado por: Winkle Kwan, British Columbia Cancer Agency

Development of Improved Target Volume Localization for Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation- Stage I

Markings placed on the skin are an accurate representation of the underlying surgical cavity and are adequate to use for patient setup for accelerated partial breast irradiation.

Visão geral do estudo

Status

Concluído

Condições

Descrição detalhada

  1. Purpose - A feasibility study to determine the accuracy of using skin markings as a surrogate for the underlying surgical cavity (SC) in accelerated partial breast irradiation.
  2. Hypothesis - Markings placed on the skin are an accurate representation of the underlying surgical cavity and are adequate to use for patient setup for accelerated partial breast irradiation.
  3. Justification Breast conserving surgery with the use of whole breast radiation after partial mastectomy is the preferred treatment for most women with early stage breast cancer. Conventional radiotherapy in this setting delivers radiation to the entire breast, with the consequence that the radiotherapy has to be given over a period of 3 - 6 weeks. However, the majority (70 - 80%) of local recurrences after breast conserving surgery develop in the vicinity of the primary tumor. Partial breast irradiation with the radiation target volume limited to the surgical cavity (SC) in selected patients is therefore potentially feasible if it results in similar local control rates compared to whole breast irradiation. In addition to limiting the radiation to breast tissue most likely to harbor microscopic disease and thereby sparing the normal breast tissue, local breast irradiation offers the distinct advantage of shortening the duration of radiotherapy, thereby minimizing the impact radiotherapy has on the quality of life of breast cancer patients.

    The current technique for accelerated partial breast irradiation assumes that the cutaneous markers correctly reflect the position of the underlying SC without strong evidence that the relationship between the two does not change. Our study will provide the crucial missing link. Phase II of our study (not included in this REB application) will go further in exploring the use of new imaging modalities in reducing the PTV margins thereby enabling oncologists to better spare normal tissues.

  4. The primary objective is to determine whether skin markings truly reflect the surgical cavity location during daily treatment by quantifying any change in relationship between the skin markings & the surgical cavity.

    The secondary objective is to investigate the dosimetric consequences of the change in size, shape, and location of the surgical cavity volume (SCV) during the treatment duration.

  5. Methods (for details see the attached protocol) To determine whether skin markings truly reflect the surgical cavity location during daily APBI.

Briefly, for Stage 1 of the study, 20 breast cancer patients undergoing adjuvant radiotherapy after breast conserving surgery with a visible SC (cavity visualization score 3 - 5) will be recruited. Skin markers will be placed on the skin around the SC during CT simulation in the manner specified in the RAPID trial. During the first week of their treatment, patients will return to the CT scanner on days 1 and 5 to undergo repeat planning CT. The patients will be set up simulating the actual treatment set up at the linear accelerator. These repeat scans will be compared with the original scan to identify any change in the relationship between the skin markings and the SC. Five oncologists trained in SC identification will then contour the SC on the original as well as the repeat CT scans. These images will be fused for each CT scan to form a representative SC volume (RSCV). The RSCV in planning and subsequent CTs will be related to skin marks to evaluate the reliability of patient positioning. Using these skin marks the beams will be placed on the patient in the CT simulation software package.

The centre of mass (COM) from RSCV will be determined from the contours and variations in x,y, and z coordinates will be averaged. This will allow a comparison between what was planned originally and what has changed over time. Coordinates of previously placed skin markers on the breast surface will be calculated relative to the COM as well as medial and lateral tattoos. This will enable us to verify if setup to external skin marks track the RSCV.

The dosimetric consequences of SCV changes in shape/size/location will be quantified as follows:

  1. Repeat CTs with drawn RSCVs will be exported to the planning system and planning fields will be applied to calculate dose distributions in target volumes and organs at risk.
  2. Dose-volume histograms (DVH) for CTV, PTV and organs at risk, as defined from CT will be evaluated for meeting planning criteria.
  3. The procedure will be repeated with simulated patient realignment using CT data sets.
  4. Appropriate PTV margins to achieve desired CTV coverage will be calculated for both the situations, with and without simulated realignment.

6. Statistical Analysis Sample Size: For Stage I, 20 patients can be successfully accrued in 6 months at the Fraser Valley Cancer Centre.

Comparison between skin marks and surgical cavity

The centre of mass (COM) from RSCV will be determined and the mean variations in x,y, and z coordinates will be calculated. In addition, the mean and standard deviation of the change in volume of the RSCV will be calculated. The movement of the COM coordinates will be calculated in reference to both the tattoos and the point guards separately. A paired t-test will be used to assess whether there is a statistically significant difference in mean COM movement in reference to the tattoos and centre spots. This will allow us to verify if setup to external skin marks (tattoos and point guards respectively) track the RSCV.

DVH comparison

The dosimetric consequences of changes in shape, size, and location of the RSCV will be quantified through analysis of DVHs (see section 7.5.). Descriptive statistics will be used to present the change in DVH for target volumes (CTV, PTV, and DEV) and OAR that occurred between the initial simulated plan and the 5 additional simulated plans (see sections 7.2 through 7.5). Furthermore, this will be repeated for the plans that have undergone simulated realignment. A paired t-test will be used to assess whether there is a statistically significant difference in mean change in DVH (for target volumes and OAR) before and after simulated realignment.

Potential decrease in CTV to PTV margin

The margin required on the CTV to create a PTV which ensures it is adequately covered, will be obtained using the DVH criteria in Table 2. Subsequently, this will be repeated for the plans that have undergone simulated realignment. A paired t-test will be used to assess whether there is a statistically significant difference in mean change in the CTV margin needed before and after simulated realignment.

Simulated patient realignment compensates for a portion of the CTV to PTV margin (the size, shape and position of the RSCV) while still leaving some uncertainty (e.g., patient respiration, daily setup). Therefore it is hypothesized that we can decrease the PTV needed with simulated realignment. We will consider a decrease in the PTV margin by ≥ 3 mm with simulated patient realignment justification for progression to Stage II of this study.

Tipo de estudo

Observacional

Inscrição (Real)

21

Contactos e Locais

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Locais de estudo

    • British Columbia
      • Surrey, British Columbia, Canadá, V3V 1Z2
        • BC Cancer Agency-Fraser Valley Centre
      • Surrey, British Columbia, Canadá, V3V 1Z2
        • British Columbia Cancer Agency- Fraser Valley Centre

Critérios de participação

Os pesquisadores procuram pessoas que se encaixem em uma determinada descrição, chamada de critérios de elegibilidade. Alguns exemplos desses critérios são a condição geral de saúde de uma pessoa ou tratamentos anteriores.

Critérios de elegibilidade

Idades elegíveis para estudo

  • Filho
  • Adulto
  • Adulto mais velho

Aceita Voluntários Saudáveis

Não

Gêneros Elegíveis para o Estudo

Fêmea

Método de amostragem

Amostra Não Probabilística

População do estudo

Women in the Fraser Valley, with Breast cancer that is suitable for treatment with a new radiation treatment procedure called accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI)

Descrição

Inclusion Criteria:

  • may participate in this study if they satisfy all of the following criteria:

    1. You have a new diagnosis of in-situ or invasive breast cancer with no evidence of distant disease spread
    2. You have no evidence of disease spread to the axillary lymph glands
    3. You were treated by lumpectomy (partial mastectomy) with no cancer found microscopically at the edge of the removed breast tissue (called negative margins).
    4. Your surgical cavity can be treated with APBI. This is dependent on many physical factors such as the size, shape, and location of the surgical cavity; the size and shape of the entire breast; as well as the exact location of the underlying heart and lungs.
    5. You fully understand the study and give your informed consent to participate as demonstrated by signing this consent form.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • You cannot participate in this if any of the following applies to you:

    1. If your tumor was larger than 3 cm in diameter on pathological examination.
    2. You had more than one primary tumour in different quadrants of the same breast.
    3. You are currently pregnant or lactating.
    4. You are suffering from psychiatric or addictive disorders which would prevent you from giving informed consent or carrying out the requirements of the study.
    5. It is not possible to localize the surgical cavity on CT scan.
    6. You have a breast implant or pacemaker on the side being treated.

Plano de estudo

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Como o estudo é projetado?

Detalhes do projeto

Colaboradores e Investigadores

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Investigadores

  • Investigador principal: Winkle A Kwan, MD, BC Cancer Agency- Fraser Valley Centre

Datas de registro do estudo

Essas datas acompanham o progresso do registro do estudo e os envios de resumo dos resultados para ClinicalTrials.gov. Os registros do estudo e os resultados relatados são revisados ​​pela National Library of Medicine (NLM) para garantir que atendam aos padrões específicos de controle de qualidade antes de serem publicados no site público.

Datas Principais do Estudo

Início do estudo

1 de janeiro de 2008

Conclusão Primária (Real)

1 de dezembro de 2010

Conclusão do estudo (Real)

1 de dezembro de 2010

Datas de inscrição no estudo

Enviado pela primeira vez

19 de dezembro de 2007

Enviado pela primeira vez que atendeu aos critérios de CQ

19 de dezembro de 2007

Primeira postagem (Estimativa)

21 de dezembro de 2007

Atualizações de registro de estudo

Última Atualização Postada (Estimativa)

4 de setembro de 2015

Última atualização enviada que atendeu aos critérios de controle de qualidade

2 de setembro de 2015

Última verificação

1 de setembro de 2015

Mais Informações

Termos relacionados a este estudo

Outros números de identificação do estudo

  • BC-RES07KWA

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Ensaios clínicos em Câncer de mama

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