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Intraoperative Radiotherapy in Treating Spinal Metastases

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Spinal Metastases
Interventions
Radiation: Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT)
Radiation: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT)
Registration Number
NCT06093854
Lead Sponsor
Shanghai Changzheng Hospital
Brief Summary

In order to provide theoretical evidence for the comprehensive and standardized treatment of spinal metastases with pathological fractures and/or spinal cord compression, the investigators conduct this trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of IORT and postoperative SBRT in adjuvant treatment of metastatic spinal tumors after posterior decompression surgery by recruiting patients with spinal metastases who met the inclusion criteria, and randomly divided them into the following treatment cohorts: 1) decompression surgery + IORT (15-20 Gy, 20-50min); 2) decompression surgery and postoperative SBRT(30Gy, 5 fractions, 3 weeks).

Detailed Description

Spine is the most common metastatic site for advanced malignancies, accounting for about 70% of all patients with bone metastasis. Approximately 40% -70% of patients with advanced cancer eventually develop spinal metastases.

Spinal metastases require multidisciplinary treatments, and surgical decompression surgery is the preferred treatment in managing spinal metastases with bone related events, especially those with spinal cord compression. The purpose of decompression surgery is to directly relieve nerve compression, alleviate pain, rebuild spinal stability, and reduce tumor burden, which improves the quality of life, and extend the life span indirectly.

At the same time, radiotherapy is also an indispensable treatment for spinal metastases after surgical decompression. The purpose of radiotherapy is to remove residual tumor lesions, alleviate pain, and prevent further pathological fractures. Recent years have witnessed the rapid development of stereotactic bone radiotherapy (SBRT). As reported, SBRT can not only increase the radiation dose at the tumor site, but also reduce radiation damage to the spinal cord and surrounding normal tissues, which is the preferred adjuvant treatment for patients with metastatic spinal tumors. However, SBRT has the several risks, including radiation myelitis, delayed vertebral pathological fractures, local skin allergies, radiotherapy side effects in the esophagus and lungs, and duodenal perforation. Moreover, stereotactic radiotherapy technology has higher costs compared to traditional external beam radiotherapy.

Recently, the application of intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) can effectively reduce the direct radiation for surrounding normal tissues and maximally eliminate the residual tumor cells. The advantages of IORT include: ① immediate reduction of the possibility of tumor cell expansion after surgery; ② Safe direct radiation and effective protection of normal tissues beyond the radiation depth; ③ To effectively protect adjacent normal tissues, light-limiting tubes with different diameters can be selected based on the size and range of tumor; ④ Shortening treatment course with lower costs and better compliance; ⑤ Slight systemic side effects and bone marrow suppression.

To the knowledge, no research focuses on the efficacy of IORT and SBRT in the adjuvant treatment of spinal metastases. Therefore, in order to provide theoretical evidence for the comprehensive and standardized treatment of spinal metastases with pathological fractures and/or spinal cord compression, the investigators conduct this trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of IORT and postoperative SBRT in adjuvant treatment of metastatic spinal tumors after posterior decompression surgery by recruiting patients with spinal metastases who met the inclusion criteria, and randomly divided them into the following treatment cohorts: 1) decompression surgery + IORT (15-20 Gy, 20-50min); 2) decompression surgery and postoperative SBRT(30Gy, 5 fractions, 3 weeks).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
132
Inclusion Criteria
  • Clinical diagnosis of spinal metastases;
  • Estimated survival time more than 3 months;
  • The spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS) >12;
  • The general condition allows to recieve surgery;
  • Single or multiple metastatic lesions with only one site presenting epidural spinal cord compression;
  • signed informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Clinical diagnosis of primary spinal tumors;
  • Presence of metastases in central nerve system;
  • Isolated lesion undergoing en bloc resection;
  • Mental disorder and/or intellectual dificiency;
  • Refusing to accept follow-up;
  • without signing informed consent.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Decompression surgery + IORTIntraoperative radiotherapy (IORT)Decompression surgery + IORT (15-20 Gy, 20-50min)
Decompression surgery + postoperative SBRTStereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT)Decompression surgery + postoperative SBRT (30Gy, 5 fractions, 3 weeks)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Local control rate2 years

The local control of tumor in the surgical field

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Health-related quality of life2 years

The "Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy -General" (FACT-G) Scale (Minimum: 0; Maximum: 108 ) is utilized to evaluate the health-related quality of life after treatments, and higher scores mean a worse outcome.

Progression-free survival2 years

The survival time between the day after treatments and the date of any evidence proving tumor progression or final follow-up

Overall survival2 years

The survival time between the day after treatments and the date of all-cause death or final follow-up

Radiation-related complications2 years

The complications assciated with the radiation process

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Shanghai Changzheng Hospital

🇨🇳

Shanghai, Shanghai, China

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