Actively Recruiting
Combined Treatment of Patients With Newly Diagnosed Glioblastoma Using the Xoft® Axxent® Electronic Brachytherapy (eBx®) System for Intraoperative Balloon Electronic Brachytherapy
Led by Joint Stock Company European Medical Centre · Updated on 2025-09-16
15
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
182 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Glioblastoma is the most aggressive primary brain tumor due to its highly infiltrative growth pattern, strong proliferative potential, and multiple mechanisms of resistance to treatment . Based on results from multicenter studies, English oncologist Roger Stupp proposed in 2005 a new treatment approach involving initial tumor resection followed by conformal external beam radiation therapy combined with temozolomide, plus subsequent cycles of monochemotherapy with this drug. This approach extended median survival by only 2 months, yet remains the standard of care due to lack of better alternatives. Consequently, recent protocols for malignant CNS tumors in Russia and internationally recommend prioritizing clinical trial enrollment over "standard" treatment. Numerous studies demonstrate that the extent of resection of contrast-enhancing GB volume on MRI positively correlates with progression-free and overall survival. This is explained by the fact that adjuvant chemoradiation methods and the body's immune responses show efficacy only with small residual tumor volumes. The interval between surgery and adjuvant therapy negatively correlates with survival outcomes, potentially because the mitotic cycle of GB stem cells lasts only 24 hours. From this perspective, intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) may improve treatment results. Attempts to use various IORT technologies for malignant brain gliomas span several decades. Some studies reported better survival with IORT compared to controls, but most involved small patient groups without reliable resection control or dosimetric assessment due to technological limitations. Early IORT methods used bulky linear accelerators producing high-energy electron beams. With portable systems, renewed interest emerged first in breast cancer, then neurosurgery. Neuroimaging and software now enable precise treatment planning. Bensaleh S. et al. evaluated balloon brachytherapy (MammoSite®) for early breast cancer in 2009. The device featured a dual-lumen catheter with a balloon inserted into the resection cavity. After contrast inflation and CT planning, 192Ir delivered 34 Gy in 10 fractions over 5 days to 1 cm depth. While comparable to conventional radiotherapy in 3-5 year survival, the 16% infection rate from prolonged implantation was a major drawback. A case report described using a similar breast cancer system (Contura balloon applicator) for recurrent malignant glioma in a 47-year-old patient. A single 20 Gy fraction showed no complications at 6-month follow-up. The Zeiss INTRABEAM system uses a miniature 50 kV linear accelerator with rigid spherical applicators producing low-energy x-rays for high surface doses with limited penetration. The 2018 INTRAGO phase I/II trial by Giordano et al. evaluated dose escalation (20→40 Gy) in 15 newly diagnosed GB patients. No complications (wound healing issues, bleeding, ischemia, or radionecrosis requiring surgery) occurred. Median PFS was 17.7 months (95% CI 9.7-25.9) in protocol-compliant patients, with distant progression remaining challenging. A recent advancement is electronic brachytherapy using the Xoft Axxent eBx System, combining a 50 kV x-ray source with a silicone balloon applicator conforming to resection cavities. Initially successful in breast and gynecologic cancers, its application expanded to neuro-oncology. In 2016, the European Medical Center (EMC) initiated a pilot study using Axxent eBx for recurrent GB post-standard chemoradiation. Twenty-nine patients received 20 Gy to the balloon surface after maximal safe resection. Median OS was 28.7 months (range 14-104) from first surgery. In patients with ≤2.5 cm³ residual tumor (n=16), median local PFS was 14.5 months (8-94), with 6- and 12-month PFS rates of 68.9% and 31% respectively. One grade 3 radionecrosis case occurred (CTCAE), with no infections or CSF leaks. Study Rationale: * Demonstrated survival benefits with gross-total resection of contrast-enhancing tumor * Negative survival impact of delayed adjuvant therapy initiation * Promising preliminary results of resection plus electronic brachytherapy in recurrent GB from EMC research This is a pilot, prospective, single-center, non-comparative study. Patients (N=15) with newly diagnosed glioblastoma will undergo intraoperative balloon-based electronic brachytherapy (IOBT) using the Xoft® Axxent® eBx® System immediately following gross total resection of the contrast-enhancing tumor. A single fractional dose of 20 Gy will be delivered to the balloon surface. Subsequently, patients will receive standard chemoradiotherapy according to the Stupp protocol (2005): * Concurrent phase (initiated 2-4 weeks postoperatively): * Radiotherapy: Conformal external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) to a total dose of 60 Gy (2 Gy/fraction over 6 weeks). * Chemotherapy: Daily oral temozolomide (75 mg/m²) during EBRT. * Adjuvant phase: * Monotherapy: 6-12 cycles (6-12 months) of adjuvant temozolomide (150-200 mg/m², days 1-5 of each 2
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Combined Treatment of Patients With Newly Diagnosed Glioblastoma Using the Xoft® Axxent® Electronic Brachytherapy (eBx®) System for Intraoperative Balloon Electronic Brachytherapy
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Age between 40 and 75 years
- Karnofsky Performance Status of 70% or higher
- Able and willing to give informed consent
- Newly diagnosed glioblastoma confirmed by preoperative imaging and intraoperative pathology
- Feasibility of total or near-total tumor removal
- Post-surgery cavity suitable for placement of the balloon applicator
- Negative pregnancy test within 7 days before treatment for women of childbearing potential
- Adequate blood counts within 7 days before enrollment (ANC 500 cells/mm, platelets 7,000 cells/mm, hemoglobin 10.0 g/dL)
- Kidney and liver function within required limits before enrollment
- Urine protein levels within specified limits before enrollment
- Stable anticoagulant therapy without active bleeding or high bleeding risk
You will not qualify if you...
- Multicentric or multifocal glioblastoma
- Tumor spread to infratentorial or leptomeningeal regions
- Recurrent or progressive glioblastoma
- Prior cranial radiation therapy
- Tumor located within 10 mm of critical brain structures preventing adequate radiation
- Tumor larger than 6 cm in diameter
- Active or prior malignancy except treated non-melanoma skin cancer or carcinoma in situ
- Other intracranial tumors currently or in history
- Pregnancy, lactation, or unwillingness to use contraception
- Contraindications to MRI
- Inoperable or non-removable cardiac pacemaker or device
- Contraindications to general anesthesia
- Participation in other clinical trials
- Severe heart, vascular, respiratory, liver diseases, or infections requiring IV antibiotics
- Positive tests for HIV, HBV, HCV, or syphilis
- Grade 3 or higher bleeding within 30 days before enrollment
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Joint-Stock Company European Medical Center
Moscow, Moscow, Russia, 129090
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
E
Evgeniy Avetisov
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
1
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