Precision Radiotherapy for Refractory Brain Metastases: A Multicenter Study
Precision Radiotherapy With Novel Technologies and Strategies for Refractory Brain Metastases: A Multicenter Prospective Study
1 other identifier
interventional
200
0 countries
N/A
Brief Summary
Conventional image-guided techniques (such as cone-beam CT) have poor soft tissue contrast and unsatisfactory treatment outcomes. MRgART offers high-resolution imaging of brain tissue and, by acquiring daily MR images, successfully achieves real-time image monitoring, displaying tumor position and volume changes during treatment. This may improve local control rates for brain metastases, reduce toxicities, and translate into survival benefits. Our research team has already conducted a phase II prospective study and achieved favorable results, with a 1-year local control rate of 100% for intracranial brain metastases, significantly superior to historical controls of conventional radiotherapy, no severe late toxicities, and real-time individualized precision treatment. Based on the phase II study results, this phase III single-arm prospective study was designed. This study aims to conduct a multicenter prospective study to establish an MR-guided adaptive radiotherapy (MRgART) technical platform, enabling real-time monitoring of tumor position and volume changes and individualized plan adaptation. Through technological innovation, we aim to significantly improve local control rates for large and complexly located brain metastases while reducing severe adverse effects such as radiation brain necrosis, thereby laying the technical foundation for precise and safe treatment. This study will establish a new technical system for adaptive radiotherapy (ART) for brain metastases based on per-fraction MR images acquired during radiotherapy, using adaptive radiotherapy to improve target dose coverage and reduce radiation doses to organs at risk such as normal brain tissue. It is anticipated to validate the phase II findings of high local control, low toxicity, and significantly prolonged survival. Based on the obtained results, combined with multicenter clinical practice and application experience, domestic and international expert symposiums and special sessions will be conducted, and a multicenter consensus on MRI-linac guided adaptive radiotherapy for brain metastases from lung cancer will be developed. Furthermore, this study recognizes that MRI generates high noise levels and that without appropriate hearing protection, repeated treatments may cause hearing damage to patients. Therefore, the study will simultaneously collect hearing-related scales from patients before, during, and after treatment (through pure-tone audiometry tests performed in the otolaryngology department or self-administered pure-tone screening via a mini-program) to explore the impact of performing or not performing strict hearing protection on changes in patients' hearing scales, as well as its effect on treatment interruption or repeated setup. Compared to conventional cone-beam CT-guided radiotherapy, MRI-guided adaptive radiotherapy still has some shortcomings. MR image acquisition is slow, and after each fraction's images are acquired, they require manual registration with CT images, followed by manual re-contouring and manual plan calculation, and finally, execution requires triple review by physicians, physicists, and therapists. Currently, each patient requires approximately 40 minutes to 1 hour from lying on the treatment couch to the end of treatment. If there are setup errors or significant target volume changes requiring adaptive re-contouring, even more time may be needed to complete the treatment, posing significant challenges to patients' physical strength and mental state, and limiting its potential application value in patients with altered consciousness, the elderly and frail, or those unable to cooperate. Additionally, it consumes substantial medical resources. To address this situation, our research group plans to develop an artificial intelligence-assisted system for target contouring, treatment planning, and treatment decision-making. Based on our center's previously published results, we aim to establish a full-process AI-assisted model for MRgART in the treatment of lung cancer brain metastases, and compare its efficacy and treatment time differences with manual-only radiotherapy delivery. On this basis, we will explore the feasibility of exempting a small subset of patients (approximately 10-20 patients) in the phase III study from conventional CT and MR simulation, contouring targets and generating plans on simulation CT and MRI images, and then directly using ATS (adaptive target shaping based on interfractional target deformation) to generate radiotherapy plans within the MRgART workflow and proceed with subsequent treatment.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P25-P50 for phase_3
Started Apr 2026
Typical duration for phase_3
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
April 9, 2026
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
April 28, 2026
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
May 14, 2026
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
December 31, 2028
ExpectedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
December 31, 2028
May 14, 2026
April 1, 2026
2.7 years
April 9, 2026
May 7, 2026
Conditions
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (1)
2-year Local Control Rate
At 2 years post-treatment
Secondary Outcomes (5)
iPFS
At 1 and 2 years post-treatment
OS
At 2 years post-treatment
RN
At 2 years post-treatment
DCR
At 2 years post-treatment
ORR
At 2 years post-treatment
Study Arms (1)
MRgART
EXPERIMENTALPatients will receive 1.5T MR-Linac guided adaptive radiotherapy (52 Gy/13 fractions, with individualized fractionation adjustments based on tumor size and location).
Interventions
Patients will receive 1.5T MR-Linac guided adaptive radiotherapy (52 Gy/13 fractions, with individualized fractionation adjustments based on tumor size and location).
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Pathologically diagnosed non-small cell lung cancer or small cell lung cancer;
- Brain metastases diagnosed by contrast-enhanced MRI;
- KPS ≥ 60, or KPS ≥ 40 if caused solely by intracranial tumors;
- Brain metastases with a diameter ≥ 2 cm or volume ≥ 6 cm³, with 1-3 lesions;
- No prior brain radiotherapy;
- Able to undergo MRI examination;
- Good compliance and ability to lie flat for more than 45 minutes;
- No major organ dysfunction, etc.;
- Signed informed consent and agreement to receive post-treatment follow-up;
- All patients must be willing to provide tumor tissue samples before randomization;
- At least one measurable tumor lesion according to RECIST v1.1 or iRECIST criteria.
You may not qualify if:
- Other serious illnesses;
- Presence of implants in the patient's body, such as cardiac pacemakers, prostheses, or surgical stents, particularly cerebrovascular stents;
- Presence of shrapnel, bullets, or other foreign objects anywhere in the body;
- Severe back pain when lying supine;
- Severe claustrophobia;
- Inability to complete treatment or estimated survival \< 3 months;
- Currently participating in other clinical trials for the treatment of brain metastases;
- Prior history of intracranial radiotherapy;
- Unstable angina, myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass grafting, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular accident (including transient ischemic attack, pulmonary embolism) within 3 months prior to enrollment;
- Persistent arrhythmia (CTCAE grade ≥ 2), atrial fibrillation of any degree, prolonged QTc interval ( \> 450 ms in males, \> 470 ms in females);
- Refractory hypertension (blood pressure still \> 150/100 mm Hg despite optimal medical therapy);
- Known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection;
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women;
- Receipt of a live vaccine within 30 days prior to the first dose of study drug. Live vaccines include, but are not limited to: measles, mumps, rubella, varicella/zoster (chickenpox), yellow fever, rabies, bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), and typhoid vaccines. Seasonal influenza vaccines for injection are typically inactivated virus vaccines and are permitted; however, intranasal influenza vaccines (e.g., FluMist®) are live attenuated vaccines and are not permitted;
- Active autoimmune disease requiring systemic treatment (i.e., immunomodulatory drugs, corticosteroids, or immunosuppressive drugs) within the past 2 years (autoimmune diseases include, for example: autoimmune hepatitis, interstitial pneumonia, uveitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, antiphospholipid syndrome-associated vascular thrombosis, Wegener's granulomatosis, Sjögren's syndrome, Guillain-Barré syndrome, multiple sclerosis, vasculitis, glomerulonephritis, hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism, asthma requiring bronchodilators, etc., i.e., immunomodulatory drugs, corticosteroids, or immunosuppressive drugs). Replacement therapy (e.g., thyroxine, insulin, or physiologic corticosteroid replacement therapy for adrenal or pituitary insufficiency) is not considered systemic treatment and is permitted;
- +4 more criteria
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- phase 3
- Allocation
- NA
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- SINGLE GROUP
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Chief Physician
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
April 9, 2026
First Posted
May 14, 2026
Study Start
April 28, 2026
Primary Completion (Estimated)
December 31, 2028
Study Completion (Estimated)
December 31, 2028
Last Updated
May 14, 2026
Record last verified: 2026-04
Data Sharing
- IPD Sharing
- Will not share