To hear about similar clinical trials, please enter your email below
Trial Title:
Early Detection of Complications During Immunotherapy for Haematological Malignancy
NCT ID:
NCT06377059
Condition:
Hematologic Cancer
CRS - Cytokine Release Syndrome
Conditions: Official terms:
Hematologic Neoplasms
Cytokine Release Syndrome
Conditions: Keywords:
wireless monitoring
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Not yet recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Single Group Assignment
Primary purpose:
Diagnostic
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Device
Intervention name:
WARD
Description:
Heart rate and respiratory rate is measured using Isansys lifetouch (Isansys Lifecare,
Oxfordshire, UK), single-lead ECG monitor. An ECG is recorded as a 10-second segment
every minute. Heart rate is derived once per minute from the R-R interval, and similarly,
the RF is calculated from the changes in thoracic impedance once per minute. Blood
pressure is monitored with either Meditech BlueBP-05 (Meditech Ltd., Budapest, Hungary)
or A&D TM-2441 (A&D company Ltd., Tokyo, Japan). Both are non-invasive oscillometric,
cuff-based blood pressure monitoring devices. Peripheral oxygen saturation was measured
with NonIn WristOx 3150 (Nonin Medical Inc., Minnesota, USA) pulse oximeter, which is a
photoplethysmograph with a sampling frequency of 75 Hz.
Arm group label:
WARD equipment alarms
Summary:
Aims
- To identify patients that should remain admitted in hospital for more intense
surveillance because of high risk for development of clinical complications
- Expand the understanding of the interactions between physiology and immunology for
the design of future projects and general knowledge Hypothesis Development of a risk
model based on a combination of physiological and immunological parameters can
contribute to early detection of patients at risk for clinical complications after
anti-cancer treatment.
Detailed description:
Patients going through medical or surgical cancer treatment have a joined risk for
clinical complications after treatment. Complications are often discovered too late
because patients are checked on periodically during hospitalization, but it is estimated
that at least 40% of these complications can be prevented if they are discovered in time.
Yet this requires the development of new methods for patient monitoring.
Immunologic and physiologic monitoring show promising results, because activation of the
immune system is either a consequence to a clinical complication (e.g. infection), or on
its own pathological (e.g. systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), and cytokine
release syndrome (CRS)).
Therefor the purpose of this study is to combine three research projects to further the
understanding physiological and immunological pathways, and attempt to improve patient
monitoring, in hopes of raising patient care levels and enhance clinical outcomes. The
research projects are as follows:
- WARD (''Wireless Assessment of Respiratory and circulatory Distress''). A continuous
wireless surveillance of patient vital signs in real time. Time stamped data
facilitate comparing of patterns of more than one vital sign. WARD clinical support
system is developed and tested on > 3.000 patients with more than 250.000 hours of
recordings since 2016.
- Phase one unit. An acknowledged clinical research unit where advanced cancer immune
therapy is administered safely and under close observation. Thus, patients can
safely be admitted for days to weeks and supervised for development of any clinical
complications which make intervention possible in time. The unit has a high patient
volume which guarantees a high inclusion rate and is a unique opportunity to conduct
advanced project in a controlled environment, which is essential for the project
machine-learning methodology
- TruCulture and Duraclone. High dimensional immune phenotyping as well as
standardised testing system study the immune function in blood after ex vivo
stimulation from selected host response pathways, and measuring of plasma levels for
pro- and anti-inflammatory markers for systemic inflammation (TNF-alpha,
interleukins, CRP etc.) The project group has until now focused on the surgical
trauma as a standardized stimulation of the immune system, where development of
clinical complications can be related to measurements before and after the trauma.
This stands in opposition to most other illnesses, where patients are first seen by
a healthcare worker when the illness has occurred. In this joined project the three
projects previously mentioned will be combined to make a unique description of the
development of clinical complications or the absence hereof in relation to treatment
of haematological malignancies with antigen receptor stimulation.
The project will be based on the previous decades' development of anti-cancer treatments,
where focus has shifted from chemotherapy to biological targeted treatments. An example
hereof is small molecules that affects intracellular pathways (Kinase inhibitor) and
antibody treatments targeting cancer specific surface molecules [7]. In the past five
years has the development taken a rapid leap with some kinds of immune therapy,
especially chimeric antigen receptor T-cell treatment (CART) and T-cell engaging
bispecific antibodies (BsAbs). With these new treatment options comes other side effects
and these T-cell antigen treatments are no exception. The most common side effect to CART
and BsAbs is cytokine release syndrome (CRS). It is seen in > 50% of the treated patients
within the first month of treatment. CRS is a hyperinflammatory syndrome, that occurs
when a series of cytokine sand chemokines are released by T-cell activation and
-recruitment. The syndrome ranges from monosymptomatic fever (grade 1) but is often
accompanied by hypoxia and/or hypotension (grade 2). CRS grade three to four include
affection of vital organs, which can possibly develop into an irreversible condition. The
treatment entails antipyretics, adrenocorticotropic hormone in the early phases, and more
advanced monoclonal antibodies in cases of CRS grade two to four. The definition and
grading of CRS is based on the presence of fever and the grade of hypoxia and
hypotension, thus based on thresholds for vital signs and without the use of immunologic
markers. The early detection of signs for CRS will enable early onset of treatment which
subsequently can halt the development of the condition. Risk factors for the development
of severe CRS are described but the predictive value is low. The level of inflammatory
cytokines is correlated to the severity of CRS but these cytokines (CRP, IL-6 etc.)
significantly increase hours to days after the development of the clinical syndrome,
which make not suitable for evaluating the need for hospitalization and/or treatment for
CRS. Early onset markers for the development of CRS are therefor clinical signs of
systemic inflammation, e.g. rise in temperature, decrease in blood pressure,
desaturation, and likely tachycardia. Thus, the combination of CART and BsAbs treatment,
the WARD project and immune profiling is a unique opportunity to improve this field and
potentially have great impact on patients' outcome.
Statistical analysis plan:
- Descriptive univariate analysis between potentially predictive variables and CRS
- Descriptive analysis of vital signs development during immunotherapy
- Developing a risk model with a 90% certainty, measured as 0.9 area under the curve
(AUC), using regression analysis that identifies patients at risk of severe clinical
complications within 30 days after anti-cancer treatment
- Developing a risk model with a 90% certainty, measured as 0.9 area under the curve
(AUC), using regression analysis that identifies patients without risk of severe
clinical complications within 30 days after anti-cancer treatment
- Patient and nurse experiences from continuous vital sign monitoring during
immunotherapy
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age ≥ 18 years
- Patients diagnosed with haematologic malignant disease (e.g. malignant lymphoma)
- Patients scheduled for treatment with CART or BsAbs
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patient is pregnant
- Patient has a pacemaker
- Patient is allergic to one or more of the materials that the equipment consists of
- Investigator deems patient not able to comply with participation in the study
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Start date:
November 1, 2024
Completion date:
July 1, 2027
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06377059