Study Stopped
ECT equipment not available at study center
Electrochemotherapy For The Treatment Of Breast Cancer That Has Spread to the Skin
An International Randomized Phase II Study Comparing Early Electrochemotherapy to Delayed or No Electrochemotherapy in Patients With Cutaneous Breast Cancer Metastases
1 other identifier
interventional
N/A
1 country
1
Brief Summary
Electroporation combined with chemotherapy (ECT) has been shown to be an effective treatment for breast cancer that has spread to skin. In routine clinical practise, ECT is offered to patients when all other treatment options have been exhausted. This study tests the hypothesis that early treatment with ECT may result in improved local control of skin metastases, improved quality of life and reduced health care costs. Patients are randomised to either ECT given as early as possible in the course of the disease or delaying ECT for at least 6 months.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
Started Oct 2011
1 active site
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Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
Study Start
First participant enrolled
October 1, 2011
CompletedFirst Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
November 14, 2011
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
November 28, 2011
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
December 1, 2014
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
June 1, 2015
CompletedDecember 9, 2014
December 1, 2014
3.2 years
November 14, 2011
December 8, 2014
Conditions
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (1)
local control of skin metastases
6 months from randomisation
Secondary Outcomes (3)
Local control of skin metastases during the time interval of 6 to 18 months after randomization
18 months
Quality of Life
monthly (up to 18 months)
Health economic analysis
recorded monthly (up to 18 months)
Study Arms (2)
Early Electrochemotherapy
EXPERIMENTALElectrochemotherapy is given as early as possible after the discovery of skin metastases
Delayed or no Electrochemotherapy
NO INTERVENTIONpatients are to be treated for their breast cancer according to clinical routine with electrochemotherapy as an option only after 6 months from randomization
Interventions
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Male or female patients \> 18 years of age
- Histological confirmed breast cancer
- Metastatic breast cancer (skin lesions only are considered as metastatic disease)
- Prior histological confirmation of at least one skin lesion
- Skin lesions must not have a depth greater than 3 cm (measured clinically if possible otherwise on the basis of CT/ultrasound examination
- Confluent skin metastases where individual lesions are hard to define in their entirety may not exceed a maximum area of 10 x 10 cm for each area of confluence. If there are several areas of confluence, the patient may be included in the study provided that all lesions can be treated within the time constraints of a single ECT session (20 minutes).
- Not more than ten skin lesions. Each area of confluence is considered as one lesion.
- A single skin lesion may not exceed 5 cm
- Patients in the early ECT arm may receive any other cancer treatments at the discretion of the treating physician starting no earlier than 2 weeks following ECT. This is to ensure that patients with metastatic disease in other locations will receive treatment that is considered suitable regardless of their participation in this trial. (If 2 weeks from ECT to the start of systemic treatment is judged to be too long by the treating physician, this patient should not be entered into the trial).
- Women of childbearing age must practice a suitable form of contraception.
- A life expectancy of at least 6 months.
- Patients with a ECOG performance status \< 3
- Signed Informed Consent
You may not qualify if:
- Patients who have extensive and rapidly progressive visceral metastases where a delay in systemic therapy by eventual ECT is judged to not be in the patients' best interest
- Patients, who for medical reasons, cannot be given bleomycin
- Patients with brain metastases treated with surgery and/or radiotherapy who have progressive disease in the brain two months after treatment
- Prior cumulative dose of bleomycin exceeding 250,000 IU/m2
- Less than 14 days from previous cancer treatment (either local or systemic)
- If the patient has skin lesions that are situated in close proximity to a pacemaker such that an electrical field from ECT will overlap the pacemaker, the pacemaker must be moved to another location in order for the patient to be able to participate in the study
- Chronic renal failure (serum creatinine \> 150 mol/L)
- Inadequate liver function defined as:
- ASAT or ALAT \> 2.5 x ULN in the absence of liver metastases or \> 5 in the presence of liver metastases or Bilirubin \> 2 x ULN (except in the case of Gilberts Syndrome) or Albumin \< 25 g/L
- Inadequate bone marrow reserve defined as: White blood cell count \< 3 X 109/L or Neutrophil count \< 1.5 X109/L or Platelet count \< 100 X 109/L
- Any severe uncontrolled systemic disease.
- Unable or unwilling to comply with the study protocol
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Deaprtment of Oncology, University Hospital Uppsala
Uppsala, 751 85, Sweden
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Interventions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- STUDY DIRECTOR
Jeffrey R Yachnin, MD, PhD
Uppsala University Hospital
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- phase 2
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Study Coordinator
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
November 14, 2011
First Posted
November 28, 2011
Study Start
October 1, 2011
Primary Completion
December 1, 2014
Study Completion
June 1, 2015
Last Updated
December 9, 2014
Record last verified: 2014-12