Drug Screening Using IMD in Bladder Cancer
- Conditions
- Muscle Invasive Bladder Urothelial Carcinoma
- Interventions
- Device: Implantable Micro-DeviceDrug: Gemcitabine/Cisplatin IDrug: Methotrexate/Vinblastine/Doxorubicin/Cisplatin/AvelumabDrug: Gemcitabine/Cisplatin IIDrug: Gemcitabine/CarboplatinDrug: Methotrexate/Vinblastine/Doxorubicin/CisplatinDrug: Gemcitabine/Cisplatin/NivolumabDrug: Paclitaxel/Docetaxel/IfosfamideDrug: Gemcitabine/Carboplatin/Nivolumab
- Registration Number
- NCT06204614
- Lead Sponsor
- Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Brief Summary
This research study involves implanting up to 4 microdevices, each small enough to fit inside the tip of a needle, into a tumor. These devices will release microdoses (many thousands of times less than a treatment dose) of different cancer drugs into the tumor. After approximately 72 hours, the devices and small regions of surrounding tissue will be removed and studied. There will be a follow-up visit within 42 days of device removal to assess for potential safety issues or side effects.
- Detailed Description
This is a phase I pilot study of microdevice implantation and retrieval in patients with primary bladder cancer. The microdevice is 5x1mm and can be deployed using a biopsy needle placed percutaneously using imaging guidance. The purpose of the microdevice is to measure local intratumor response to antitumor medications in patients with primary bladder cancer. The microdevice contains multiple, separate reservoirs that are each loaded with a specific drug or drug combination.
Candidate patients will first be evaluated based on a CT or MRI, obtained as part of clinical care, and a physician who will determine whether the target lesion is amenable for microdevice implantation. Microdevice implantation will occur via cystoscopy using a flexible grasper (similar to that used for ureteral stent removal). Several independent microdevices will be placed per patient and target lesion. After implantation, the reservoirs release microdoses of each drug allowing the drug to interact with the tumor tissue in its native microenvironment. After device removal and before pathologic analysis, a repeat plain film X-ray of the bladder will be obtained to evaluate for microdevice migration. The microdevice(s) will be removed along with the target tumor as part of standard-of-care surgical excision. The tumor tissue surrounding the device will undergo pathologic and molecular analysis to assess local drug efficacy for each reservoir. These analyses will explore the impact of drug treatment on local cellular processes (e.g., apoptosis, pathway signaling).
The investigators will also investigate preliminary correlations between drug response as assessed by the microdevice and clinical outcomes and response to therapy. Collectively, these studies will establish the feasibility of clinical application of a drug-sensitivity microdevice in bladder cancer and the capacity of such a device to predict systemic response to cancer therapeutics.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 18
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Patients must have the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.
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Participants must have confirmed clinically localized bladder cancer with histology of urothelial cell carcinoma or variant histology and radiographic imaging consistent with stage T2-T3 N0 disease. Patients must be planned for cystectomy as part of their clinical care. The lesion planned for excision must be at least 1cm in size.
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Participants must be 18 years of age or older. Patients must have the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.
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Participants must have confirmed clinically localized bladder cancer with histology of urothelial cell carcinoma or variant histology and radiographic imaging consistent with stage T2-T3 N0 disease. Patients must be planned for cystectomy as part of their clinical care. The lesion planned for excision must be at least 1cm in size.
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Participants must be 18 years of age or older. Patients must have the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.
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Participants must have confirmed clinically localized bladder cancer with histology of urothelial cell carcinoma or variant histology and radiographic imaging consistent with stage T2-T3 N0 disease. Patients must be planned for cystectomy as part of their clinical care. The lesion planned for excision must be at least 1cm in size.
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Participants must be 18 years of age or older.
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Participants must be evaluated by a medical oncologist who will determine the clinically appropriate treatment strategy based on clinical history and extent of disease.
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Patients must be deemed medically stable to undergo both percutaneous procedures and standard-of-care surgical procedures.
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Participants will undergo laboratory testing within 30 days prior to the procedure (or within 72 hours if there has been a change in the clinical status since the initial blood draw). Patients must have absolute neutrophil count ≥1,000/mcL, platelets ≥50,000/mcL, PT (INR) 1.5 and PTT<1.5x control.
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Participants must have undergone CT or MRI that assesses the extent of disease and allows the research team to assess for study eligibility. This will have been done as part of the standard-of-care.
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The participant's case must be reviewed by the treating physician to assess the following factors:
- Patient is clinically stable to undergo microdevice implantation and surgical procedures
- Patient has sufficient volume of disease to allow implantation of the microdevice
- Patient has a lesion for which the microdevice is a) amenable to percutaneous placement, and b) amenable to removal at the time of surgery
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Patients must be willing to undergo research-related genetic sequencing (somatic and germline) and data management, including the deposition of de-identified genetic sequencing data in NIH central data repositories.
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Patients must be agree to remain abstinent or use contraceptive measures for the duration of the study period
- Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, unstable cardiac arrhythmia, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit the safety of a biopsy and/or surgery.
- Uncorrectable bleeding or coagulation disorder known to cause increased risk with surgical or biopsy procedures (detailed below in section 5.1.2.1).
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Methotrexate Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Implantable Micro-Device Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine/Cisplatin II Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine/Carboplatin Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Methotrexate/Vinblastine/Doxorubicin/Cisplatin/Avelumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine/Cisplatin/Nivolumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine/Cisplatin I Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Methotrexate/Vinblastine/Doxorubicin/Cisplatin Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Sacituzumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Erdafitinib Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Paclitaxel/Docetaxel/Ifosfamide Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine/Carboplatin/Nivolumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Avelumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Paclitaxel Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Carboplatin Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Vinblastine Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Cisplatin Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Pembrolizumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Nivolumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Gemcitabine Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice. DRUG SCREENING USING IMD IN BLADDER CANCER Enfortumab Study participants placed in arm 1 will be implanted with the microdevice.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Feasibility of microdevice placement 48 Hours A placement is defined as successful if the investigators can implant and extract at least one microdevice from a patient's tumor with readable tissue for pathology from at least three-quarters of the device reservoirs surrounded by at least 400um of surrounding tissue. The investigators will declare feasibility if the lower bound of the 95% binomial CI does not exceed 0.65, that is if the investigators have 2 or fewer failures. The number of patients with successful retrieval will be summarized as number, percentage and with a 95% CI. Based on prior studies, if device reservoirs are surrounded by at least 400um of tissue, this enables downstream multi-omic analysis.
Safety of microdevice placement and removal based on assessment of adverse events From the time of arrival to interventional radiology for microdevice placement up to 6 weeks. A device will be declared safe if and only if all implanted devices do not cause an adverse event as defined in section 5.4. The device will be declared safe if 2 or less unacceptable toxicities are observed. Safety will be monitored using a BOIN-based boundary estimated assuming a 10% event rate and a stopping probability of 0.70. The boundary will not take effect until the third patient is enrolled. The trial will be stopped for safety concerns if the investigators see at least 1 adverse event in the first nine patients, or 2 adverse events across all 18. The probability of seeing 2 or less unacceptable toxicity events is 71% if the true rate of toxicity is 10% and 94% if the true rate of toxicity is 5%. The safety estimate will be summarized as number, percentage and with a 95% binomial confidence interval
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Exploration of additional potential biomarkers of drug response 48 Hours To explore additional potential biomarkers of drug response. We will perform immunohistochemical staining for markers of proliferation (ki67) and cell death (Cleaved Parp) in the local tumor tissue adjacent to the microdevice. Results will be calculated as a percentage of positively stained cells in the 500 micron radius adjacent to each reservoir on the microdevice, and will be reported as a percentage of positively stained versus total cells in the region of interest.
Descriptive statistics will be used to summarize the results for each biomarker across multiple devices and drugs.Local intratumor response 48 Hours To measure the local intratumor response to clinically relevant drugs in bladder cancer using quantitative histopathologic assessment of tumor tissue.
The investigators will analyze tumor sections for each drug treatment zone using a immunohistochemical stain for apoptosis (cleaved caspase 3) and report the result for each condition as a percentage of positively stained cells (vs. total number of cells) within a radius of 500 microns from the drug reservoir.
A board-certified pathologist will review staining quality of the histopathological staining.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Brigham and Women's Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States