Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor

Abstract Background Our previous studies showed that vasoconstrictor applied topically to rat skin minutes before irradiation completely prevented radiodermatitis. Here we report on a Phase IIa study of topically applied NG12-1 vasoconstrictor to prevent radiodermatitis in post-lumpectomy breast can...

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Main Authors: James F. Cleary, Bethany M. Anderson, Jens C. Eickhoff, Deepak Khuntia, William E. Fahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:Radiation Oncology
Subjects:
ROS
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0940-7
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spelling doaj-bcb0f0818ffd412887b65cdd432da66c2020-11-25T01:27:09ZengBMCRadiation Oncology1748-717X2017-12-011211710.1186/s13014-017-0940-7Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictorJames F. Cleary0Bethany M. Anderson1Jens C. Eickhoff2Deepak Khuntia3William E. Fahl4Department of Medicine, University of WisconsinDepartment of Human Oncology, University of WisconsinDepartment of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of WisconsinVarian Medical SystemsDepartment of Oncology, Wisconsin Institutes of Medical Research, University of Wisconsin-MadisonAbstract Background Our previous studies showed that vasoconstrictor applied topically to rat skin minutes before irradiation completely prevented radiodermatitis. Here we report on a Phase IIa study of topically applied NG12-1 vasoconstrictor to prevent radiodermatitis in post-lumpectomy breast cancer patients who received at least 40 Gray to the whole breast using standard regimens. Methods Patients had undergone surgery for Stage Ia, Ib, or IIa infiltrating ductal or lobular carcinoma of the breast or ductal carcinoma in situ. NG12-1 formulation was applied topically to the same 50-cm2 treatment site within the radiation field 20 min before each daily radiotherapy fraction. Results Scores indicated significant reductions in radiodermatitis at the NG12-1 treatment site versus control areas in the same radiotherapy field. The mean dermatitis score for all subjects was 0.47 (SD 0.24) in the NG12-1-treated area versus 0.72 (SD 0.22) in the control area (P = 0.022). Analysis by two independent investigators indicated radiodermatitis reductions in 9 of the 9 patients with scorable radiodermatitis severity, and one patient with insufficient radiodermatitis to enable scoring. There were no serious adverse events from NG12-1 treatment. Conclusions Thirty, daily, NG12-1 treatments, topically applied minutes before radiotherapy, were well tolerated and conferred statistically significant reductions in radiodermatitis severity (P = 0.022). Trial registration NCT01263366 ; clinicaltrials.govhttp://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0940-7ROSPhase IIa clinical trial
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James F. Cleary
Bethany M. Anderson
Jens C. Eickhoff
Deepak Khuntia
William E. Fahl
spellingShingle James F. Cleary
Bethany M. Anderson
Jens C. Eickhoff
Deepak Khuntia
William E. Fahl
Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
Radiation Oncology
ROS
Phase IIa clinical trial
author_facet James F. Cleary
Bethany M. Anderson
Jens C. Eickhoff
Deepak Khuntia
William E. Fahl
author_sort James F. Cleary
title Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
title_short Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
title_full Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
title_fullStr Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
title_full_unstemmed Significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
title_sort significant suppression of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients using a topically applied adrenergic vasoconstrictor
publisher BMC
series Radiation Oncology
issn 1748-717X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background Our previous studies showed that vasoconstrictor applied topically to rat skin minutes before irradiation completely prevented radiodermatitis. Here we report on a Phase IIa study of topically applied NG12-1 vasoconstrictor to prevent radiodermatitis in post-lumpectomy breast cancer patients who received at least 40 Gray to the whole breast using standard regimens. Methods Patients had undergone surgery for Stage Ia, Ib, or IIa infiltrating ductal or lobular carcinoma of the breast or ductal carcinoma in situ. NG12-1 formulation was applied topically to the same 50-cm2 treatment site within the radiation field 20 min before each daily radiotherapy fraction. Results Scores indicated significant reductions in radiodermatitis at the NG12-1 treatment site versus control areas in the same radiotherapy field. The mean dermatitis score for all subjects was 0.47 (SD 0.24) in the NG12-1-treated area versus 0.72 (SD 0.22) in the control area (P = 0.022). Analysis by two independent investigators indicated radiodermatitis reductions in 9 of the 9 patients with scorable radiodermatitis severity, and one patient with insufficient radiodermatitis to enable scoring. There were no serious adverse events from NG12-1 treatment. Conclusions Thirty, daily, NG12-1 treatments, topically applied minutes before radiotherapy, were well tolerated and conferred statistically significant reductions in radiodermatitis severity (P = 0.022). Trial registration NCT01263366 ; clinicaltrials.gov
topic ROS
Phase IIa clinical trial
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0940-7
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