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Duration of Ameluz Application in Acral Actinic Keratoses Response

Phase 4
Terminated
Conditions
Actinic Keratoses
Photodamaged Skin
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT03963102
Lead Sponsor
Royal Cornwall Hospitals Trust
Brief Summary

A phase IV study of a single topical application of ALA for 3 hours or 4 hours to AK on acral sites (hands, feet, arms and legs), and subsequent measurement of clinical efficacy with corresponding PpIX fluorescence imaging.

Detailed Description

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a relatively new treatment for skin cancer and sun-damaged skin, which may turn cancerous or pre-cancerous. PDT treatment consists of applying a gel containing aminolevulinic acid hydrochloride (licensed for clinical use as Ameluz®) to the abnormal area. Inside the diseased cells this gel is changed over a few hours into a light-sensitive chemical (photosensitiser) that reacts with light. The photosensitiser is inactive by itself. A red light is then shone on to the lesion; this reacts with the photosensitiser and destroys the abnormal cells. Only the treated area will be affected and inflamed. The area will be cured in most cases after the inflammation clears.

Actinic keratosis (AK) is a type of pre-cancerous lesion caused by sun damage. If left, they can progress to become skin cancer. These can be treated in different ways, with different topical creams, liquid nitrogen or PDT. Some lesions may have reoccurred after topical creams, patients also have unacceptable amount of inflammation or the lesion involve too large an area. Liquid nitrogen is as good as PDT in treating AKs, however have been reported to leave a less good cosmetic result.

PDT is a licensed treatment for AK. However, PDT has been shown to be less effective for AKs on certain areas such as hands and feet. Further understanding of the build-up of the photosensitiser may enable better cure rates at these body parts, enabling more patients to benefit from PDT.

The proposed theory is that a longer application of the Ameluz gel will increase the amount of photosensitiser, which accumulates in the treated areas, and thus increase the amount of damage to cells, and mean that more patients have a successful treatment.

The aim of this study is to investigate whether applying the Ameluz gel for 4 hours (trial group) rather than 3 hours (control group) will improve treatment success rates in AK lesions on hands, feet, arms and legs. The information gained from this study may result in better treatment design of PDT for AK.

To do this the investigators plan to apply Ameluz® gel to AK lesions for either the standard 3 hours or the currently unlicensed 4 hours. The investigators will then measure the amount of that has changed into the photosensitiser, using a special digital camera. This camera device is not invasive and does not have any side effects. Some patients may have multiple AK lesions on multiple sites; the investigator aim to treat all these in the same manner due to practicality, and will record data for these lesions as well.

The investigator will record if patients report any associated pain during light delivery, as well as the temperature of the lesion during treatment. Some patients opt to have an external cooling system or water spray during the light treatment, but in order to standardise treatment during the trial this will not be used. The investigator will however give patients the option of taking paracetamol themselves prior to the treatment. A dermatology doctor will then review the patients at three months following treatment to see if their AK has been cured, and receive further treatment if needed.

The pathway is the same as standard PDT treatment and does not involve an extra visit.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
28
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Patient has given written informed consent.
  2. Males and females > 18 years.
  3. AK lesions on arms, hands, legs or feet that are practical to treat with PDT.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Lesions with a clinical diagnosis of Bowen's disease, superficial, morphoeic or nodular basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, or melanoma as they are not the types of lesions required for investigation.
  2. Any disease which is caused or exacerbated by light, including systemic lupus erythematosus, porphyria, actinic reticuloid or xeroderma pigmentosum. Part of the clinical study will be the use of light-imaging system so any condition, which is sensitive to such instruments, will be excluded.
  3. Males or females of childbearing potential, who are not practicing adequate contraceptive precaution. Female patients should practice strict birth control (oestrogen-containing oral contraceptives or an IUD) throughout the trial. Only post-menopausal women (12 months or more with no menses) and women who have had a hysterectomy are exempt from the requirements to use birth control. Male patients should also use adequate contraception for the duration of the trial.
  4. Pregnant or lactating females
  5. Treatment in the previous 45 days with any cryotherapy, topical treatments for AK, experimental compound, an iron chelating agent, radiotherapy, chemotherapy or with any light activated therapy or any other medication, which may render the patient light sensitive (e.g. PUVA).
  6. Photodynamic therapy treatment in the previous 90 days.
  7. Co-existing ophthalmic disease likely to require slit lamp examination within 30 days of PDT treatment.
  8. Known allergies to porphyrins, peanut, soya or excipients.
  9. Patients not able to comply with study requirements.
  10. Patients on immunosuppression medication.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Control Group 3 hoursAmeluzApplication of Ameluz for 3 hours.
Trial Group 4 hoursAmeluzApplication of Ameluz for 4 hours.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The odds of full clearance of individual lesions in the intervention and control groups will be compared (reported as an odds ratio with 95%CLs).3 months

Clinical outcome at 3 months of the treated AK lesions on acral sites

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PpIX dissipation fluorescenceAfter data collection is completed, during analysis phase, expected at 12 months.

PpIX dissipation over time (3 measurements for each lesion) will be presented graphically, grouped by participant and lesion type (acral and non-acral). The dissipation score is the PpIX fluroscence measured after light treatment.

The fluorescence after light treatment will be compared between intervention and control groups with a random effects model. The analysis will be adjusted for baseline fluorescence, grade of lesion, and location of lesion. A change score analysis will be carried out for comparison.

Clearance of lesions on other body sites3 months

The odds of full clearance of any non-acral individual lesions in the intervention and control groups will be compared (reported as an odds ratio with 95%CLs). Lesions will be either cleared or not cleared.

Pain Score1 week

The mean of pain levels as measure by the Visual Analogue Scale with standard deviation will be provided between treatment arms.

PhotobleachingAfter data collection is completed, during analysis phase, expected at 12 months.

Photobleaching will be calculated as the difference in fluorescence score before and after light treatment (change score). This is measured using the Dyaderm Fluroscence imaging system.

PpIX accumulation fluorescenceAfter data collection is completed, during analysis phase, expected at 12 months.

PpIX accumulation over time (3 measurements for each lesion) will be presented graphically, grouped by participant and lesion type (acral and non-acral). The accumulation score is the PpIX fluroscence measured before light treatment.

The fluorescence before light treatment will be compared between intervention and control groups with a random effects model. The analysis will be adjusted for baseline fluorescence, grade of lesion, and location of lesion. A change score analysis will be carried out for comparison.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Royal Cornwall Hospital

🇬🇧

Truro, Cornwall, United Kingdom

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