RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT01873131

A Clinical Trial of Pulsed-dye Laser Versus Timolol Topical Solution Versus Observation on the Growth of Hemangioma in Newborn

Preventing Growth of Hemangioma Tumors in Newborn: A Prospective Randomized Clinical Study


Sponsor

Massachusetts General Hospital

Enrollment

126 participants

Start Date

Feb 1, 2011

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The purpose of this study is to find out if pulsed dye laser treatment or timolol maleate 0.5% gel can help infants who have a hemangioma. The investigators also want to find out if pulsed dye laser treatment and timolol maleate 0.5% gel are safe to use without causing too many side effects. Hemangioma is a common type of birthmark. These birthmarks happen when many new blood vessels grow in a specific area on the skin. Blood vessels are tiny tubes that carry blood through the body. No one knows what causes blood vessels to group together. Most birthmarks don't hurt at all and they usually aren't a sign of any kind of illness. Lots of newborns have these birthmarks on their bodies, like between the eyebrows. These birthmarks usually disappear within the first few months to years of life. These birthmarks tend to disappear spontaneously. Most hemangiomas are not treated unless the hemangioma threatens the child's health, which occurs in about 1 in 3 children with hemagiomas. Pulsed dye laser is widely used in children, and is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating hemangioma. The FDA has approved timolol maleate to treat glaucoma in adults, but the FDA has not approved timolol maleate to treat hemangiomas in children. About 7 infants with hemangiomas have received timolol maleate. The results so far show that timolol maleate may be helpful and safe in treating hemangiomas in infants. An important question being tested in this study is whether pulsed-dye laser or timolol maleate can prevent hemangioma from growing when used very early after birth.


Eligibility

Max Age: 3 Months

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study compares three approaches for managing hemangiomas (a type of non-cancerous blood vessel birthmark that appears in newborns and may grow rapidly in the first months of life): laser treatment, a medicated eye drop (timolol) applied to the skin, or simply watching and waiting without treatment. **You may be eligible if...** - Your infant is under 3 months old and has one or more superficial hemangiomas that are in the very early growth phase - The hemangioma was absent or barely visible at birth but became more noticeable within the first month - You as the parent or guardian are willing to follow the treatment plan and attend follow-up visits **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your infant has already received treatment for the hemangioma (steroids or other medications) - Your infant has a serious medical condition such as a heart or airway problem - The hemangioma is threatening vision, hearing, or breathing - The area to be treated is infected or scarred - Your infant has a weakened immune system - Your infant has asthma, serious heart rhythm problems, or is on beta-blocker or ACE inhibitor medications (relevant for the timolol arm) Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGtopical timolol maleate

Timolol maleate 0.5% ophthalmic solution will be used. The dose will be 1 drop per square centimeter of hemangioma, rubbed into the area by the parent/guardian twice daily. The intent is to cover the entire lesion without excess of medication. Therefore, the dose can be lowered from 1 drop/cm2 at the discretion of the investigators, but not increased. This dose should not have significant systemic side effects given that the normal systemic intravenous dose for propanolol is 2mg/kg/day and there would be much less systemic absorption if the solution is applied topically. It is well established that the stratum corneum greatly slows the transport of timolol.

DEVICEPulsed dye laser

A 595-nm PDL (V-beam Perfecta, Candela Corp, Wayland, MA, USA) with a dynamic cooling device (DCD) will be utilized for all treatments. This device is cleared by the FDA for clinical treatment of vascular lesions. Protective eyewear for patient and all participants in the treatment room will be provided. A spot size of 7 or 10 mm will be used with an average fluence (energy delivered per unit area, in J/cm2) of 9 J/cm2 (range 8-10.0 J/cm2). Fluence will vary according to patient and hemangioma characteristics, including age, skin type, location, lesion thickness and response to treatment. A 30-50 ms cryogen spray cooling (CSC) duration will precede the laser pulse duration of 0.4 ms.


Locations(1)

Massachusetts General Hospital

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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NCT01873131


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