Feasibility Study of Intraoperative Imaging in Breast Cancer
Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2017-10-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
For most breast cancer patients, surgery is the primary treatment. When patients undergo a
lumpectomy, it is difficult for the surgeon to determine the extent of the tumor which
results in incomplete tumor removal as determined by a positive margin assessment several
days after the initial surgery is completed. Most patients with positive margins will undergo
a second or even a third surgery to complete the tumor removal. The investigators hypothesize
that the LUM Imaging System can reduce the rates of positive margins and, thus, the rates of
second surgeries by identifying microscopic residual cancer in the tumor bed.
This is a non-randomized, open label study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of an
intraoperative imaging system, the LUM Imaging System (LUM015 in conjunction with LUM 2.6
Imaging Device), in identifying residual cancer in the tumor bed of female breast cancer
subjects. The study is composed of a Feasibility Trial divided into two phases: Phase A (15
total subjects) and Phase B (up to 50 total subjects). During Phase A, 15 subjects will be
evaluated to collect additional patient safety data, select the dose of LUM015 for Phase B
and evaluate the device function. During Phase B, subjects will be injected with LUM015 at
the dose determined during Phase A to preliminarily assess the performance of the detection
algorithm against pathology margin assessment. In Phase B, the surgeon will perform standard
of care surgery and then use the LUM Imaging System to guide the removal of additional cavity
shavings as indicated by the LUM Imaging System.
Phase:
N/A
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Lumicell, Inc.
Collaborators:
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Massachusetts General Hospital National Cancer Institute (NCI)