RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT05671458

Multiparametric Imaging-based Intraoperative Navigation for Guidance of Surgical Resection and Postoperative Radiotherapy in Patients With Head-and-neck Tumors

Multiparametric Imaging-based Intraoperative Navigation for Guidance of Surgical Resection and Postoperative Radiotherapy in Patients With Head-and-neck Tumors - NAVIGATORR


Sponsor

Juergen Debus

Enrollment

60 participants

Start Date

Jan 1, 2023

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The overarching goal of the NAVIGATORR trial is the improvement of local tumor control in head-and-neck cancer (HNC) by increasing the precision of surgical resection and individualization of radiotherapy. Squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) together with salivary gland carcinomas (adenoid cysytic Carcinoma (ACC), mucoepidermoid Carcinoma (MEC), adenocarcinoma (AC)) represent the most common entities in German head and neck oncology. In localized tumors, primary tumor resection with possible adjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy is still the treatment of choice. Advances in targeted therapy and immunotherapy have greatly expanded the repertoire of medical oncology in recent years. In particular, prognosis of patients with end-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been improved and even patients with advanced head and neck disease can be offered new second line regimes. Importantly, all of these advances are based on personalized and targeted therapies. Unfortunately, surgical oncology in the head-and-neck region has not yet shown such developments towards individualized treatment, so that the rates of safe oncological resections (clear resection margins) haven been stagnating. Despite advances in reconstructive surgery that allow the resection of head-and-neck tumors that would not have been operable 10 - 15 years ago, the basic principles of the resection margin and especially margin evaluation have remained unchanged. The technique of navigation-based tumor resection and the annotation of biopsies by titanium clip-markings or special annotation have been described, but only in small case series and without proving the benefit of the method concerning clinically relevant parameters. Therefore, the NAVIGATORR trial will enroll 60 patients with HNC of the midface that will undergo navigation-based surgery. Importantly, interdisciplinary data exchange of the intraoperative navigation data between surgeons, pathologists and radiation oncologists will be established. Clear surgical margins (distance between tumor cells and resection border \> 5 mm) have been defined as primary endpoint. Secondary endpoints such as dosimetric assessment of individualized radiotherapy plans, local tumor control or overall survival should then be compared to data from the literature to further assess this multidisciplinary approach.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study tests a new image-guided surgical navigation system that combines multiple types of scans (MRI, CT, PET) to help surgeons more precisely remove head and neck tumors affecting the face, upper jaw, and skull base. The system also helps plan follow-up radiation therapy more accurately. **You may be eligible if...** - You are 18 or older - You have been diagnosed with a malignant tumor of the midface, upper jaw, or skull base (such as squamous cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma) - Surgery has been recommended at a multidisciplinary tumor conference - You are medically fit for surgery and have given written consent - Your performance status is good enough to tolerate the procedure (Karnofsky score ≥60) **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your tumor cannot be removed surgically or you are medically unfit for surgery - Radiation therapy is not expected to be needed after surgery - You are unable to consent or cooperate with the procedure 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

OTHERintraoperative navigation and creation of tumor resection maps

TRM are based on intraoperative navigation data and yield anatomically accurate marks of the tumor resection margin and potential residual tumor areas on clinical imaging. These marks will be annotated with histopathological information. Subsequently, the resulting 3-dimensional TRM will be imported into the radiotherapy planning system as part of a multidisciplinary workflow.


Locations(1)

Department of Radiotherapy, University of Heidelberg

Heidelberg, Germany

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NCT05671458


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