EFLASH for Skin Lesions of Malignant Melanomas

Study Purpose

This prospective single center phase I trials aims to assess feasibility and safety of electron FLASH RT for treatment of melanoma skin metastases. Feasibility will be defined as FLASH delivery with an accuracy of +/-10% for each fraction, safety will be confirmed if a maximum of 2 out of 6 patients develop dose limited toxicity.

Recruitment Criteria

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Healthy volunteers are participants who do not have a disease or condition, or related conditions or symptoms

No
Study Type

An interventional clinical study is where participants are assigned to receive one or more interventions (or no intervention) so that researchers can evaluate the effects of the interventions on biomedical or health-related outcomes.


An observational clinical study is where participants identified as belonging to study groups are assessed for biomedical or health outcomes.


Searching Both is inclusive of interventional and observational studies.

Interventional
Eligible Ages 18 Years and Over
Gender All
More Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria

Inclusion criteria. 1. Signed study Informed Consent Form. 2. Males and females, age ≥ 18 years, no upper age limit. 3. Patients with metastatic melanoma and ≥ 1 skin/subcutaneous metastases (clearly definable in clinical examination: largest dimension of ≥ 5mm and ≤ 55 mm; ≤ 2.8 cm thickness (caliper-based measurement); volume ≤ 100ccm) with an indication for palliative radiotherapy of ≥ 1 skin/subcutaneous metastases according to the multidisciplinary tumorboard. 4. The treated lesions must be at least 5 cm apart from each other, if applicable. 5. Lesions located on the scalp can be treated. 6. ECOG 0-2. Note: Patients may receive concurrent standard of care systemic treatment.

Exclusion criteria:

1. Previous radiotherapy of the target lesions. 2. Ulcerated lesions may not be treated within the study. Patients may have ulcerated tumor lesions besides those selected for treatment within the trial. 3. Lesions, for which a homogeneous dose distribution inside the tumor D95%> 95%
  • - D2% <107% for the PTV (acceptable deviation D90%> 80% - D2% <115%) in the treatment planning system cannot be achieved.
4. Lesions should not be located on the face. Lesions on the forehead located cranially from a line situated 1 cm above the eyebrows can be treated (=cranial of sinus frontalis). 5. Lesions should not be located directly on genitals. 6. Lesions with close proximity to air-filled cavities or air-filled, luminal organs (e.g. bowel). Close proximity is defined by intersection of the respective part of the organ at risk with the 80% isodose line of the lesion planned for radiotherapy. 7. Women who are pregnant or breast feeding. 8. Lack of safe contraception during the study, defined as: Female participants of childbearing potential and male participants with partner of childbearing potential, not using and not willing to continue using a medically reliable method of contraception for the entire study duration, such as oral, injectable, or implantable contraceptives, or intrauterine contraceptive devices, or who are not using any other method considered sufficiently reliable by the investigator in individual cases. 9. Known or suspected non-compliance, drug or alcohol abuse, inability to follow the procedures of the study, e.g. due to language problems, psychological disorders, dementia, etc. of the participant, previous enrollment into the current study. 10. Enrollment of the investigator, his/her family members, employees and other dependent persons. 11. Active infection including tuberculosis (clinical evaluation that includes clinical history, physical examination and radiographic findings, and TB testing in line with local practice), hepatitis B (known positive HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) result), hepatitis C. Patients with a past or resolved HBV infection (defined as the presence of hepatitis B core antibody [anti-HBc] and absence of HBsAg) are eligible. Patients positive for hepatitis C (HCV) antibody are eligible only if polymerase chain reaction is negative for HCV RNA. Not adequately controlled HIV disease (HIV-viral load detectable). 12. Other severe comorbidities or psychiatric disorders (e.g. myocardial infraction within 6 months prior to registration, permanent cardiac arrhythmia, COPD Gold IV, schizophrenia, ongoing alcohol abuse) that would, according to the evaluation of the investigator, limit compliance with study requirement, substantially increase the risk of incurring adverse events or compromise the ability of the patient to give written informed consent. 13. History of sun hypersensitivity or photosensitive dermatoses including porphyria, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren's syndrome, xeroderma pigmentosum, polymorphous light eruptions. 14. Concomitant auto-immune disease with skin lesions. 15. Concomitant use of radio-sensitizer drug. 16. Current, recent (within 10 days prior to start of study treatment), or planned participation in an experimental drug study (before end of treatment (EOT) visit). 17. Concomitant use of systemic oncological treatment for another cancer than the metastatic melanoma.

Trial Details

Trial ID:

This trial id was obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, providing information on publicly and privately supported clinical studies of human participants with locations in all 50 States and in 196 countries.

NCT06549439
Phase

Phase 1: Studies that emphasize safety and how the drug is metabolized and excreted in humans.

Phase 2: Studies that gather preliminary data on effectiveness (whether the drug works in people who have a certain disease or condition) and additional safety data.

Phase 3: Studies that gather more information about safety and effectiveness by studying different populations and different dosages and by using the drug in combination with other drugs.

Phase 4: Studies occurring after FDA has approved a drug for marketing, efficacy, or optimal use.

N/A
Lead Sponsor

The sponsor is the organization or person who oversees the clinical study and is responsible for analyzing the study data.

University of Zurich
Principal Investigator

The person who is responsible for the scientific and technical direction of the entire clinical study.

N/A
Principal Investigator Affiliation N/A
Agency Class

Category of organization(s) involved as sponsor (and collaborator) supporting the trial.

Other, Industry
Overall Status Recruiting
Countries Switzerland
Conditions

The disease, disorder, syndrome, illness, or injury that is being studied.

Metastatic Melanoma
Additional Details

Trial aim: This prospective single center phase I trial aims to assess feasibility and safety of electron Flash RT for treatment of melanoma skin metastases. Feasibility will be defined as Flash delivery with an accuracy of ±10% for at least 10 out of 12 Flash-RT fractions and the accuracy of the total reference dose delivered (3x 9 Gy) is ±5%, safety will be confirmed if a maximum of 2 out of 6 patients develop dose-limiting toxicity. Intervention Flash: A nominal electron energy of 9 MeV will be used for both Flash-RT and Conv-RT, which guarantees ≥ 90% dose coverage up to a depth of 2.8 cm. Shallower lesions will be treated with the same electron energy and with a bolus. In order to treat these patients, field sizes between 2x2cm2 and 10x10cm2 will be used, which can be delivered with sufficient flatness (<5%) and symmetry (<2%) by the FlashTrueBeam v2.7.5. Trial outline: In the primary cohort, six patients with ≥ 1 melanoma skin lesion(s) (possible other lesions do not have to be treated) will be treated with a radiotherapy schedule of 3x 9 Gy (2x fractions/ week; α/β(3): EQD2: 64.8 Gy; α/β(10): EQD2: 42.75 Gy). A minimum of one lesion will be treated with Flash-RT (2x 9 Gy) and Conv-RT (1x 9 Gy) as experimental treatment and an optional minimum of one lesion will be treated with Conv-RT (3x 9 Gy) as "internal" control. As a consequence, also patients with a single lesion can be included into the trial. For the experimental treatment, the first two fractions will be applied with Flash-RT. Following dosimetry of these two fractions, the third fraction will be applied by Conv-RT and will be adjusted to compensate for possible lower or higher doses applied with Flash-RT before. This approach ensures that every lesion is treated with precisely a total reference dose of 27 Gy (± 5%), ultimately. In an optional expansion cohort, up to 4 additional patients (total of n=10) will be recruited. The expansion cohort serves to further validate the primary results. The initiation of the expansion cohort requires to following three factors: 1. A maximum of 2 out of 6 patients develop DLT an no unexpected high-grade toxicity appear in the primary cohort; 2. Feasibility in the first six patients was shown (defined as Flash delivery with an accuracy of ±10% for at least 10 out of 12 Flash-RT fractions and the accuracy of the total reference dose delivered (3x 9 Gy) of ±5%); 3. No excessive duration in the recruitment of the primary cohort. Patients will be included and treated into the expansion cohort as in the primary cohort.

Arms & Interventions

Arms

Experimental: Intervention

A nominal electron energy of 9 MeV will be used for both Flash-RT and Conv-RT, which guarantees ≥ 90% dose coverage up to a depth of 2.8 cm. Shallower lesions will be treated with the same electron energy and with a bolus. In order to treat these patients, field sizes between 2x2cm2 and 10x10cm2 will be used, which can be delivered with sufficient flatness (<5%) and symmetry (<2%) by the FlashTrueBeam v2.7.5.

Interventions

Radiation: - Electron FLASH radiotherapy

A nominal electron energy of 9 MeV will be used for both Flash-RT and Conv-RT, which guarantees ≥ 90% dose coverage up to a depth of 2.8 cm. Shallower lesions will be treated with the same electron energy and with a bolus. In order to treat these patients, field sizes between 2x2cm2 and 10x10cm2 will be used, which can be delivered with sufficient flatness (<5%) and symmetry (<2%) by the FlashTrueBeam v2.7.5.

Contact a Trial Team

If you are interested in learning more about this trial, find the trial site nearest to your location and contact the site coordinator via email or phone. We also strongly recommend that you consult with your healthcare provider about the trials that may interest you and refer to our terms of service below.

International Sites

University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

University Hospital Zurich

Zurich, , 8091

Site Contact

Jens von der Gruen

[email protected]

+41 43 253 44 78

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