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GammaTile and Stupp in Newly Diagnosed GBM
Sponsor: GT Medical Technologies, Inc.
Summary
In summary, standard of care postoperative chemoradiation for patients with newly diagnosed GBM does not routinely provide durable local control or prolonged overall survival. As discussed above it seems unlikely that patient outcomes will be significantly improved with radiation dose escalation given at the time of the EBRT boost. However, as most failures are local, improving LC could potentially improve the OS of patients. To do this, we propose a shift in the traditional radiation paradigm. This study will assess the feasibility and tolerability of adding GT radiation therapy as an upfront boost at the time of maximum safe resection, along with the backbone of the current standard of care approach, concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide +/- TTF, for patients with newly diagnosed GBM. GT, a novel brain brachytherapy device utilizing Cs-131 embedded in bioresorbable collagen tiles, offers a more sophisticated carrier and a shorter half-life radioisotope, Cs-131. Use of this device allows for radiation initiation at an earlier time point and a more rapid dose delivery and possibly more effective tumor control particularly for rapidly proliferating tumors such as GBM. Two prospective studies have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of re-irradiation with GT in patients with recurrent GBM. The overarching goal of this single-arm, open label phase 4 study is to determine the feasibility and tolerability of treating patients with GammaTile in combination with the Stupp Protocol and how to proceed with testing this treatment in a future, larger, randomized clinical study. The aims of the study are to demonstrate that the use of GammaTile at the time of surgery is well tolerated and does not delay the start of the Stupp protocol. Efficacy outcomes (e.g., LC, OS, PFS) will also be described.
Official title: Pilot Study of Resection and GammaTile Followed by Concomitant External Beam Radiation Therapy (EBRT) and Temozolomide (TMZ) and Adjuvant in Newly Diagnosed Glioblastoma (GBM)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
61
Start Date
2022-08-17
Completion Date
2027-12-01
Last Updated
2025-09-05
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Surgical tumor resection, GammaTile radiation therapy implantation, Stupp protocol (EBRT and Temozolamide)
At the initiation of the surgical phase maximal safe resection will be undertaken, and after 25 + 4 from surgery participants will start the concomitant phase and receive daily temozolomide (TMZ, 75mg/m2) and 20 fractions external beam radiation (EBRT). The EBRT treatment will be to the operative bed and any residual disease identified at the time of the imaging obtained for EBRT planning. The EBRT planning will utilize the GT implant dosimetry with the intent that the dose received from the GT will be accounted for during the EBRT treatment planning process. Twenty-eight days ±7 after the completion of concomitant TMZ and EBRT, participants will enter the adjuvant phase and will be treated with TMZ (150-200mg/m2) for 5 days at the start of every 28- day cycle, for 6 cycles.
Locations (16)
HonorHeath Scottsdale Osborn Medical Center
Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
Keck Medicine of USC
Los Angeles, California, United States
UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center
Sacramento, California, United States
Advent Health Orlando
Orlando, Florida, United States
Florida Health Sciences Center, Inc. d/b/a Tampa General Hospital
Tampa, Florida, United States
Piedmont Healthcare
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
RUSH University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Indiana University Office of Clinical Research
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
University of Kansas Hospital
Kansas City, Kansas, United States
Henry Ford Health System
Detroit, Michigan, United States
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
St. Louis University Hospital Center
St Louis, Missouri, United States
ECU Health Medical Center - Vidant
Greenville, North Carolina, United States
Kettering Medical Center
Kettering, Ohio, United States
Brown University Health
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
UTHealth Houston | Memorial Hermann Health System
Houston, Texas, United States