FLASH Radiotherapy for the Treatment of Symptomatic Bone Metastases (FAST-01): Protocol for the First Prospective Feasibility Study

Author:

Daugherty Emily CORCID,Mascia AnthonyORCID,Zhang YongORCID,Lee EunsinORCID,Xiao ZhiyanORCID,Sertorio MathieuORCID,Woo JenniferORCID,McCann ClaireORCID,Russell KennethORCID,Levine LisaORCID,Sharma RickyORCID,Khuntia DeepakORCID,Bradley JeffreyORCID,Simone II Charles BORCID,Perentesis JohnORCID,Breneman JohnORCID

Abstract

Background In preclinical studies, FLASH therapy, in which radiation delivered at ultrahigh dose rates of ≥40 Gy per second, has been shown to cause less injury to normal tissues than radiotherapy delivered at conventional dose rates. This paper describes the protocol for the first-in-human clinical investigation of proton FLASH therapy. Objective FAST-01 is a prospective, single-center trial designed to assess the workflow feasibility, toxicity, and efficacy of FLASH therapy for the treatment of painful bone metastases in the extremities. Methods Following informed consent, 10 subjects aged ≥18 years with up to 3 painful bone metastases in the extremities (excluding the feet, hands, and wrists) will be enrolled. A treatment field selected from a predefined library of plans with fixed field sizes (from 7.5 cm × 7.5 cm up to 7.5 cm × 20 cm) will be used for treatment. Subjects will receive 8 Gy of radiation in a single fraction—a well-established palliative regimen evaluated in prior investigations using conventional dose rate photon radiotherapy. A FLASH-enabled Varian ProBeam proton therapy unit will be used to deliver treatment to the target volume at a dose rate of ≥40 Gy per second, using the plateau (transmission) portion of the proton beam. After treatment, subjects will be assessed for pain response as well as any adverse effects of FLASH radiation. The primary end points include assessing the workflow feasibility and toxicity of FLASH treatment. The secondary end point is pain response at the treated site(s), as measured by patient-reported pain scores, the use of pain medication, and any flare in bone pain after treatment. The results will be compared to those reported historically for conventional dose rate photon radiotherapy, using the same radiation dose and fractionation. Results FAST-01 opened to enrollment on November 3, 2020. Initial results are expected to be published in 2022. Conclusions The results of this investigation will contribute to further developing and optimizing the FLASH-enabled ProBeam proton therapy system workflow. The pain response and toxicity data acquired in our study will provide a greater understanding of FLASH treatment effects on tumor responses and normal tissue toxicities, and they will inform future FLASH trial designs. Trial Registration : ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04592887; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04592887 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/41812

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

Subject

General Medicine

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