This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of a chemotherapeutic drug (topotecan) as it is given directly into brain tumors by a delivery technique called convection-enhanced delivery. This drug has been used for different types of cancer, but in this study it will be given by an experimental delivery technique designed to maximize the amount of drug delivered to the brain tumor and minimize the side effects in other parts of the body. This study will also evaluate advanced magnetic resonance (MR) imaging techniques. The study will assess quality of life parameters throughout the follow-up period.
Clinical efficacy with chemotherapy has been discouraging for malignant brain tumors, mostly because of side effects and delivery limitations. Because they are locally invasive and rarely metastasize, malignant gliomas have features that make them uniquely amenable to new strategies of regional drug delivery. Intracerebral clysis (convection-enhanced delivery) is a novel drug delivery strategy that uses a microinfusion pump to establish a pressure gradient in the brain via implanted catheters. The pressure gradient produces convective forces that distribute a therapeutic agent throughout the tumor and surrounding brain tissue. Non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods of monitoring drug distribution and treatment response have been developed to maximize the clinical applications and minimize complications associated with treatment risks. Study participants will be taken to the operating room to have 2 catheters surgically placed into their tumor and surrounding tumor bed. These catheters will then be connected to small infusion pumps which will slowly infuse topotecan continuously over 4-5 days. Patients will have daily MRI scans while in the hospital. Upon completion of the experimental treatment, patients will be discharged and will be followed up in the outpatient clinic.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
16
microinfusion pumps to deliver chemotherapy directly into brain tumors
chemotherapeutic drug for the treatment of brain tumors
Columbia University Medical Center Neurological Institute
New York, New York, United States
Number of Participants With Dose Limiting Toxicities
Time frame: During treatment, up to 5 Days
Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD)
If 2 participants within a cohort develop dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), the prior dose level is considered the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Dose-Limiting Toxicities (DLT) will be defined as any new (or increased from baseline) treatment-related (drug and/or device) neurological deficits as exhibited on neurological examination with severity of grade 3 or higher.
Time frame: During treatment, up to 5 Days
Time to Tumor Progression/Recurrence
Time to tumor progression/recurrence in weeks.
Time frame: Treatment to progression, Up to 8 years
Time to Death
Time to death measured in weeks
Time frame: Treatment to Time of Death, Up to 8 Years
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