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RECRUITING
NCT07193862
EARLY_PHASE1

Pilot Study of an Implantable Microdevice for In Situ Evaluation of Drug Response in Patients With Colorectal Liver Metastasis

Sponsor: Northwell Health

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Microdevices have been used to ascertain in vivo drug response, which can lead to improved cancer treatment delivery; however, they have not been evaluated for liver tumors. This is a prospective, phase 1 safety study of percutaneous placement and surgical retrieval of a microdevice in patients with liver metastasis from colorectal cancer. The device will be implanted percutaneously 3-5 days prior to scheduled resection of colorectal liver metastasis (CLM) and then removed en bloc with the tumor. Patients will be monitored to ensure that the device's placement and retrieval does not result in increased complication rates within 14 days of surgery. To assess feasibility, the tissue surrounding the microdevice will be analyzed to assess the diffusion of the drugs from the device into the tissue and whether the therapeutic effect of diffusing chemotherapy +/- immune-modulating drugs has an impact on the surrounding tissue.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

10

Start Date

2025-12-10

Completion Date

2026-04-15

Last Updated

2026-02-27

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

COMBINATION_PRODUCT

Doxorubicin, FOLFOX, Botensilimab, Balstilimab, Bevacizumab, FOLFIRI, FOLFIRINOX, AGEN2373

Patients with diagnosed liver metastasis from a colorectal primary deemed resectable. The study intervention will be limited to the percutaneous placement of up to 2 IMDs per lesion with a maximum of 4 devices total, with the subsequent en bloc resection of the tumor plus IMD within 3 (+2) days after placement. The microdevices will remain in the tumor for a minimum of a 2-day incubation period, although ideally for 3 days. The IMD is a small cylindrical device approximately 750 um in diameter and 5 mm in length (Figure 2), housing up to 21 reservoirs. It is made of PEEK, biocompatible material used in other implantable constructs, including joint replacements. 11-13 Drugs are solubilized with poly-ethylene glycol (PEG) and loaded into the individual reservoirs. The drug diffusion has been mapped extensively to ensure that the weight of PEG is selected such that drug diffusion is limited and will not mix or interfere with another drug.

Locations (2)

RJ Zuckerberg

Lake Success, New York, United States

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

New Hyde Park, New York, United States