Lymphedema Progression Screening Using MRI



Status:Active, not recruiting
Conditions:Breast Cancer, Breast Cancer, Cancer
Therapuetic Areas:Oncology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:8/12/2018
Start Date:February 2015
End Date:June 2019

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Imaging Noninvasively With Functional-MRI for Onset, Response and Management of Lymphatic Impairment

This study will apply novel, noninvasive structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) methods to patients with mild and moderate breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) for
the first time to test fundamental hypotheses about relationships between lymphatic
compromise and imaging biomarkers that may portend disease progression and individualized
therapy response.

Lymphedema is a chronic, debilitating disease caused by lymphatic flow obstruction. Breast
cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) secondary to mastectomy and/or radiation therapy is a
growing health concern, with a reported incidence as high as 94% in breast cancer survivors.
Behavioral adjustments and aggressive therapeutic management can reduce long-term impairment
and optimize quality of life. However, there is currently no standard clinical procedure for
identifying patients at greatest BCRL risk and fundamental gaps exist in even our basic
knowledge of how the lymphatic system responds to node dissection and subsequent therapy.
Specialized imaging methods have demonstrated that reduced lymphatic flow velocity and
lymphatic contractility impairment may signify greater BCRL risk, however these approaches
frequently require radioactive tracers or exogenous contrast agents which alter the
physiological environment and are primarily available only in specialized centers. As such,
these methods are simply impractical for routine BCRL monitoring in humans or for reporting
clinical trial endpoints.

Recent work has demonstrated that spin labeling, a popular and noninvasive MRI method for
measuring perfusion, can be adapted to measure lymphatic fluid flow to axillary lymph nodes.
Furthermore chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) MRI, a popular method for measuring
protein content and pH changes in brain, breast, and liver, can be translated to the
lymphatic system to assess sensitive changes in interstitial protein accumulation, a hallmark
of lymphedema progression. Recent work has provided motivation for these techniques by
demonstrating, using commercially available equipment, that consistent changes in lymphatic
properties are detectable in vivo under (i) conditions of cuff-induced lymph flow
manipulation, and (ii) in affected vs. unaffected arms of BCRL patients. Here, these methods
will be implemented in sequence with standard clinical and MRI measures of lymph structure to
expand our understanding of lymph physiology in different stages of BCRL and in response to
therapy.

Hypothesis (1). Axillary lymph nodes and vessels, velocity of lymphatic fluid, and
interstitial protein accumulation can be visualized in a reproducible manner using
noninvasive MRI approaches that are frequently used to measure analogous metrics in brain,
breast, and liver.

Aim (1). Turbo-spin-echo, spin labeling, and CEST MRI will be applied to assess lymph
collector volume, lymphatic flow velocity, and interstitial protein accumulation,
respectively, together for the first time in healthy female volunteers. Intraclass and
Spearman's rank correlation coefficients will be calculated to understand the reproducibility
and age-dependence of these parameters in uncompromised lymphatic systems.

Hypothesis (2). (2a) The MRI protocol applied in Aim (1) can be used to detect (i) increases
in interstitial protein accumulation and (ii) reductions in lymphatic velocity in patients
with mild and moderate BCRL, and (2b) these functional metrics will be more variable than
limb volume measurements in patients in early BCRL disease stages and following common manual
lymphatic drainage (MLD) therapy, thereby demonstrating the utility of these imaging
biomarkers for identifying lymphatic dysfunction and monitoring therapy response.

Aim (2). The Aim (1) protocol will be applied to patients in preclinical (Stage 0), mild
(Stage I), and moderate (Stage II) BCRL together with volumetric limb measurements before and
after MLD therapy. A Wilcoxon rank-sum test will be used to assess differences in parameters
between patient volunteers in different BCRL stages as well as pre- and post-MLD therapy.
These data will provide an exemplar for how the novel, internal imaging measurements of
lymphatic function vary with disease severity and therapy administration.

Hypothesis (3). In preclinical BCRL patients (Stage 0), reduced lymphatic velocity and
increased interstitial protein accumulation correlates with elevated two-year BCRL
progression risk.

Aim (3). Stage 0 BCRL patients will undergo an identical MRI protocol as outlined in Aim (1)
and follow-up disability metrics will be recorded up to two years post-therapy. A
multi-parametric analysis will be used to test correlations between the hypothesized imaging
biomarkers and BCRL progression, thereby demonstrating to what extent acute MRI may be used
to stratify risk in patients at high risk for BCRL.

This work will for the first time translate a noninvasive, multi-modal MRI protocol, which
has demonstrated clinical potential in brain, liver, and breast applications, to the human
lymphatic system to better characterize lymphatic dysfunction, therapy response, and BCRL
risk in the growing breast cancer survivor population.

Inclusion Criteria:

- sex=female

- age=40-70 yrs

- clinical diagnosis of lymphedema secondary to breast cancer treatment (including node
dissection, radiation therapy, and/or sentinel node biopsy).

Exclusion Criteria:

- Contraindication to MRI

- Bilateral axillary lymph node removal

- Primary lymphedema. Individuals on tyrosine kinase inhibitors or calcium channel
blockers
We found this trial at
2
sites
2201 West End Ave
Nashville, Tennessee 37232
(615) 322-7311
Phone: 615-322-8350
Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt offers undergraduate programs in the liberal arts and sciences, engineering, music, education...
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1211 Medical Center Dr
Nashville, Tennessee 37232
(615) 322-5000
Phone: 615-322-8350
Vanderbilt Univ Med Ctr Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) is a comprehensive healthcare facility dedicated...
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Nashville, TN
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