1. First-In-Human Study in Cancer Patients Establishing the Feasibility of Oxygen Measurements in Tumors Using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance With the OxyChip.
- Author
-
Schaner, Philip E., Williams, Benjamin B., Chen, Eunice Y., Pettus, Jason R., Schreiber, Wilson A., Kmiec, Maciej M., Jarvis, Lesley A., Pastel, David A., Zuurbier, Rebecca A., DiFlorio-Alexander, Roberta M., Paydarfar, Joseph A., Gosselin, Benoit J., Barth, Richard J., Rosenkranz, Kari M., Petryakov, Sergey V., Hou, Huagang, Tse, Dan, Pletnev, Alexandre, Flood, Ann Barry, and Wood, Victoria A.
- Subjects
ELECTRON paramagnetic resonance ,OXIMETRY ,CANCER patients ,OXYGEN detectors ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PARTIAL pressure ,DECOMPRESSION sickness - Abstract
Objective: The overall objective of this clinical study was to validate an implantable oxygen sensor, called the 'OxyChip', as a clinically feasible technology that would allow individualized tumor-oxygen assessments in cancer patients prior to and during hypoxia-modification interventions such as hyperoxygen breathing. Methods: Patients with any solid tumor at ≤3-cm depth from the skin-surface scheduled to undergo surgical resection (with or without neoadjuvant therapy) were considered eligible for the study. The OxyChip was implanted in the tumor and subsequently removed during standard-of-care surgery. Partial pressure of oxygen (pO
2 ) at the implant location was assessed using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) oximetry. Results: Twenty-three cancer patients underwent OxyChip implantation in their tumors. Six patients received neoadjuvant therapy while the OxyChip was implanted. Median implant duration was 30 days (range 4–128 days). Forty-five successful oxygen measurements were made in 15 patients. Baseline pO2 values were variable with overall median 15.7 mmHg (range 0.6–73.1 mmHg); 33% of the values were below 10 mmHg. After hyperoxygenation, the overall median pO2 was 31.8 mmHg (range 1.5–144.6 mmHg). In 83% of the measurements, there was a statistically significant (p ≤ 0.05) response to hyperoxygenation. Conclusions: Measurement of baseline pO2 and response to hyperoxygenation using EPR oximetry with the OxyChip is clinically feasible in a variety of tumor types. Tumor oxygen at baseline differed significantly among patients. Although most tumors responded to a hyperoxygenation intervention, some were non-responders. These data demonstrated the need for individualized assessment of tumor oxygenation in the context of planned hyperoxygenation interventions to optimize clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF