The purpose of this study is to find out which way of giving high-dose radiation works best for treatment of cancer that has spread to bone, the spine, soft tissue, or lymph nodes. This study will look at the effects, good and/or bad, of giving 27 Gy in three fractions (3 days) or 24 Gy in one fraction (1 day) using image-guided intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IG-IMRT). IG-IMRT is radiation that is given directly to the cancer site and reduces the exposure to normal tissue. Currently there are no studies that compare the effects of giving radiation in either hypofractionated doses (higher total doses of radiation spread out over several treatment days) or a single-fraction dose (entire radiation dose given in one treatment session). The patient may be asked to participate in an additional part of this study where we will get a a (DW/DCE) MRI before treatment start and within one hour after radiation treatment. If the patient is asked to take part in this portion of the study, all they will need to do is get up to 3 MRIs with standard contrast injection. The purpose of this is to see if as a result of the treatment there are changes in the blood flow going to the cancer which could suggest that the treatment may be successful. In addition some patients can present new lesions and may be asked if they would like to have these new lesions treated on the protocol. If they are given this option, this will not extend their follow up period. The follow up of the new lesions will match with the prior follow up dates.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
220
Pts in both the hypofractionated \& single dose arms will receive the same following standard procedures. The only difference between the arms is the dose delivered at each treatment. 20 MSKCC pts (10 per treatment arm) will be accrued to undergo baseline DW-MRI \& DCE-MRI pretreatment for both arms \& 1 hour after their initial treatment for single fraction pts, \& within one hour of their initial \& final radiation treatment for the hypofractionated pts. Pts will be considered for this scan based on compliance to scan schedule \& MRI availability for performing the scan within one hour of the planned IGRT. 24 MSKCC pts (12 per treatment arm) will be accrued for the blood collection (optional) up to 4 hours prior, 50-90 minutes after, \& approximately 24 hours \[MCPG2.3\]after treatment for single fraction pts. For pts partaking in both sub-studies, the post-treatment blood collection may be done in a 50-120 minute window to account for scheduling conflicts with the research MRI.
Pts in both the hypofractionated \& single dose arms will receive the same following standard procedures. The only difference between the arms is the dose delivered at each treatment. 20 MSKCC pts (10 per treatment arm) will be accrued to undergo baseline DW-MRI \& DCE-MRI pretreatment for both arms \& within 1 hour after their initial treatment for single fraction pts, \& within one hour of their initial \& final radiation treatment for the hypofractionated pts. Pts will be considered for this scan based on compliance to scan schedule \& MRI availability for performing the scan within one hour of the planned IGRT. 24 MSKCC pts (12 per treatment arm) will be accrued for the blood collection (optional) up to 4 hours prior, 50-90 minutes after, \& approximately 24 hours \[MCPG2.3\]after treatment for single fraction pts. For pts partaking in both sub-studies, the post-treatment blood collection may be done in a 50-120 minute window to account for scheduling conflicts with the research MRI.
University of California San Francisco
San Francisco, California, United States
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States
University of Pisa
Pisa, Italy
The Champalimaud Centre
Lisbon, Portugal
To compare the loco-regional control rates of two established hypo-fractionated radiation treatment regimens
a single dose of 24 Gy versus 27 Gy in three fractions for patients with metastatic disease
Time frame: 2 years
To compare toxicity outcomes
Time frame: 2 years
To compare patterns of failure between these two cohorts.
Time frame: 2 years
To look at changes in SUV uptake as a measure of tumor response.
For patients who are followed with PET/CTs
Time frame: 2 years
changes in tumor perfusion
resulting from high-dose IGRT for patients treated with this approach to focal metastases using dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-MRI.
Time frame: 2 years
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