Hypomagnesemia (hMg) is a common side effect of important anti-cancer therapies such as epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors (EGFRIs) and platinum-containing anti-cancer drugs. EGFRIs, including cetuximab (cmab) and panitumumab (pmab), have been estimated to cause hMg in over 18% and 27% of patients respectively1, while 90% of patients receiving cisplatin will develop hMg if left untreated. The development of severe hMg may result in increased symptoms such as fatigue, neuromuscular changes, mental status changes and cardiac arrhythmias which could result in treatment delays and may compromise treatment efficacy. Despite the common occurrence of this toxicity, little is known regarding the optimal magnesium management strategy. As physicians do not know what the "best" treatment for patients is, genuine uncertainty ("clinical equipoise") exists. Physicians will choose between different "standards" of magnesium replacement in their personal practice, using idiosyncratic decision making processes, without the physician or the patient knowing the optimal option. This is not good for patients, physicians and society as a whole. Determining the optimal treatment remains an important medical issue for patients, physicians and society. This study will use a novel method to allow comparisons of established standard of care prophylactic treatment using the "integrated consent model" as part of a pragmatic clinical trial7. By integrating medical and clinical practices, physicians will be able to inform their patients about the randomized control trial, akin to a typical conversation between the physician and patient, without written informed consent. This clinical interaction would then be documented, as ordinarily done in practice. Medical and clinical practice will be intertwined with the patients' welfare at the forefront of our best interests.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
15
Magnesium Oxide
Magnesium Citrate
The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Percentage of participants who are eligible and agree to participate in RCT.
Time frame: one year
Percentage of medical oncologists who agree to participate in the study at study commencement and approach patients for the study.
Time frame: one year
Magnesium levels
Compare the differences in levels of magnesium between the two regimens
Time frame: One year
Cardiac risk
Determine whether systemic therapy-induced hypomagnesemia poses a serious risk of cardiac arrhythmias as measured by changes in average QTc intervals with changes in magnesium levels.
Time frame: one year
Cost factors
Determine cost differences between two magnesium replacement strategies.
Time frame: one year
Rates of treatment delays
Time frame: one year
Rates of hospital admissions.
Time frame: One year
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