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Phase II/III Study of Image-Guided Radiosurgery/SBRT for Localized Spine Metastasis
Primary
Phase II Component
Determine the feasibility of successfully delivering image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT for spine
metastases in a cooperative group setting
Phase III Component
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT (single dose of 16 or 18 Gy) improves
pain control (as measured by the 11 point NRPS) as compared to conventional external beam
radiotherapy (single dose of 8 Gy)
The endpoint is complete or partial pain relief at the treated index site at 3 months, (as
measured by the 11 point NRPS). Complete pain relief is defined as a score of 0 on the NRPS,
with no increase in narcotic pain medication. Partial pain relief is defined as an improvement
from the baseline NRPS of at least 3 points on the rating scale (and no progressive pain
response at any other treated lesion[s], with no increase in narcotic pain medication).
Secondary (Phase III component)
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT improves the rapidity of pain response at
the treated site(s) as compared to conventional external beam radiotherapy, as measured by
the NRPS;
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT increases the duration of pain response
at the treated site(s), as compared to conventional external beam radiotherapy, as measured
by the NRPS;
Compare adverse events between the two treatments according to the criteria in the NCI
Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0;
Evaluate the long-term effects (24 months) of image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT on the
vertebral bone (such as compression fracture) and the spinal cord by MRI;
Evaluate the potential benefit of image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT on change in and overall
quality of life, as measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACTG);
in pain as measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI); and in health utilities as measured by
the EuroQol (EQ-5D);
To implement a well-controlled specimen handling/storage process to facilitate future laboratory
correlative studies.
Primary
Phase II Component
Determine the feasibility of successfully delivering image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT for spine
metastases in a cooperative group setting
Phase III Component
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT (single dose of 16 or 18 Gy) improves
pain control (as measured by the 11 point NRPS) as compared to conventional external beam
radiotherapy (single dose of 8 Gy)
The endpoint is complete or partial pain relief at the treated index site at 3 months, (as
measured by the 11 point NRPS). Complete pain relief is defined as a score of 0 on the NRPS,
with no increase in narcotic pain medication. Partial pain relief is defined as an improvement
from the baseline NRPS of at least 3 points on the rating scale (and no progressive pain
response at any other treated lesion[s], with no increase in narcotic pain medication).
Secondary (Phase III component)
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT improves the rapidity of pain response at
the treated site(s) as compared to conventional external beam radiotherapy, as measured by
the NRPS;
Determine whether image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT increases the duration of pain response
at the treated site(s), as compared to conventional external beam radiotherapy, as measured
by the NRPS;
Compare adverse events between the two treatments according to the criteria in the NCI
Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0;
Evaluate the long-term effects (24 months) of image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT on the
vertebral bone (such as compression fracture) and the spinal cord by MRI;
Evaluate the potential benefit of image-guided radiosurgery/SBRT on change in and overall
quality of life, as measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACTG);
in pain as measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI); and in health utilities as measured by
the EuroQol (EQ-5D);
To implement a well-controlled specimen handling/storage process to facilitate future laboratory
correlative studies.
Recruitment Status
Past Studies