2024-03-20
2026-12-31
2035-12-31
30
NCT06145074
Zealand University Hospital
Zealand University Hospital
INTERVENTIONAL
Examining Safety, Efficacy and Feasibility of Preoperative Propranolol in Patients With PDAC.
The IMPULS trial is a randomized, triple-blinded, placebo controlled, single center, pilot trial examining the efficacy and safety of preoperative propranolol in patients scheduled for pancreatic cancer surgery. The study is conducted as a type 1 hybrid efficacy-implementation trial of 30 patients. This study is designed to provide pilot data for a future larger perioperative study of propranolol with the aim of improving outcomes for pancreatic cancer surgery. In total, 30 participants will be allocated in a 1:1 ratio with 15 participants enrolled in each trial arm (propranolol vs. placebo). Participants will be allocated to either 40 mg propranolol twice daily or placebo twice daily in 10 days prior to planned surgery. Primary outcomes: Evaluating the efficacy of preoperative propranolol on anxiety and in pro-tumorigenic changes (e.g., in the tumor tissue and in blood samples) in patients undergoing surgery for pancreatic cancer. Furthermore, to obtain follow up data (e.g., 90-day mortality, postoperative complications etc. on the patients receiving propranolol versus placebo). Heart rate variability among the participants will also be examined. Secondary: Examining the safety and tolerability of 40 mg preoperative propranolol twice daily in patients undergoing surgery for pancreatic cancer. Tertiary: Evaluating the feasibility and implementation of the trial (using the APEASE framework). This will help identify barriers and enablers to a future larger study. Short-time propranolol treatment is considered safe with a mild and manageable safety-profile. Risk-management, mitigations and guidelines to ensure patient safety is included in the protocol. Since this clinical trial is exploratory in nature, no sample-size calculation is performed.
The study will be conducted as a pilot study to test efficacy, safety and feasibility of propranolol on preoperative anxiety in patients undergoing abdominal surgery for suspected pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Furthermore, the implementation of the trial including compliance of the participants in a hybrid type 1 setup will be examined. A total of 30 participants will be included and randomized to receive either propranolol or placebo twice daily with 15 patients in each arm. Following this study, a power calculation will be done to reveal the actual number of needed participants in each arm for a potential follow-up randomized clinical trial on primary outcomes of interest. Thus, the results from this study can be used for future power calculations for clinical trials related to this topic. Primary objectives: Efficacy Evaluating the efficacy of preoperative propranolol on patient-experienced anxiety and on tumorigenic gene expression compared to placebo is the primary objective of this trial. Primary objectives are further divided in to primary clinical objectives, primary translational objectives and exploratory endpoints. Primary clinical objectives: The primary clinical objectives are to evaluate preoperative patient-experienced anxiety in patients receiving the nonselective beta-2-adrenergic receptor inhibitor, propranolol, compared to placebo. Further, heart rate variability (HRV) will be measured in order to evaluate changes in the autonomous nervous system in relation to surgery. HRV is calculated from the interval variation between consecutive R waves in an ECG time series and results suggest that it is associated with the intra- and postoperative complications. As HRV reflects sinoatrial node regulation, it is expected to be affected by the beta-adrenergic blockade caused by preoperative propranolol. Analyzing this relation will provide essential knowledge in understanding how HRV behaves perioperatively. Lastly, follow up on the participants receiving propranolol compared to placebo will be done. Primary clinical effect parameters: The following primary effect parameters will be used to investigate the primary clinical objectives: * Anxiety levels will primarily be measured by The Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A) and secondarily by The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) quality of life questionnaire (QoL) for pancreatic cancer will be used to assess quality of life. * HRV is calculated from continuous ECG gathered by a Holter monitor. The monitor is a small wearable apparatus with one lead, placed on the patient's sternum. It is applied on preoperative day 9 and will run continually until approximately postoperative day 7. The actual calculations are achieved post hoc using software specialized for HRV analysis. * Follow up at 30- and 90-days after surgery including parameters such as survival and postoperative complications. * Long-term follow up at as 1-year, 3- year and 5-year following surgery including survival and recurrence data. Primary translational objectives: The primary translational objectives are to examine the systemic (biochemical) and local changes (TME of resections) to propranolol treatment compared to placebo. Alterations in pro-metastatic and proinflammatory genes will specifically be analyzed. Primary translational effect parameters: * Blood sampling for the analysis of pro-metastatic and proinflammatory biomarkers. * Expression of pro-metastatic and proinflammatory genes in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) cancer tissue obtained after surgical resection. Exploratory endpoints: The potential influence of inter-participant genetic variations (pharmacogenetics) on measured levels of serum propranolol and response to surgical stress will be investigated as exploratory endpoints. The differences in drug metabolism (pharmacokinetics) among participants will also be of interest. Secondary objectives: Safety Secondarily, tolerance and safety of the intervention in this pilot study (e.g., adverse effects, number of patients that need dose reduction etc.) will be evaluated. Changes in heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) during the intervention period will be examined to test safety and tolerability of preoperative propranolol. Secondary effect parameters: * Measuring the changes in resting HR and BP during the intervention period with handed out blood pressure monitors. * Safety endpoints: light-headedness, lethargy, hypotension, bradycardia and other symptoms and side-effects that may be related to propranolol treatment. Tertiary objectives: Feasibility Additionally, the feasibility of this intervention using the APEASE framework, which assesses factors like affordability, practicability, effectiveness, acceptability, side-effects, and equity, thereby determining the willingness to adopt this strategy will be examined. This will help identify barriers and enablers to a future larger study. The details regarding the APEASE framework are described under assessments. This trial will be conducted in accordance with the principles of Good Clinical Practice and reported according to the CONSORT and the complimentary StaRI standards for implementation studies.
These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.
Study Registration Dates | Results Reporting Dates | Study Record Updates |
---|---|---|
2023-11-08 | N/A | 2024-03-25 |
2023-11-17 | N/A | 2024-03-28 |
2023-11-22 | N/A | 2023-11 |
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Allocation:
Randomized
Interventional Model:
Parallel
Masking:
Triple
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group/Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
---|---|
EXPERIMENTAL: Propranolol Propranolol will be administered 40 mg twice daily (morning and evening) in 10 days prior to surgery for pancreatic cancer | DRUG: Propranolol
|
PLACEBO_COMPARATOR: Placebo Placebo will be administered twice daily (morning and evening) in 10 days prior to surgery for pancreatic cancer. | DRUG: Placebo
|
Primary Outcome Measures | Measure Description | Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Preoperative anxiety | Assessed through the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAMA) questionnaire | Obtained preoperatively at baseline (immediately after inclusion) and immediately after intervention (before surgery) |
Preoperative anxiety and depression | Assessed through the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) questionnaire | Obtained preoperatively at baseline (immediately after inclusion) and immediately after intervention (before surgery) |
Preoperative quality of life | Preoperative quality of life assessed through the quality of life questionnaire. | Obtained preoperatively at baseline (immediately after inclusion) and immediately after intervention (before surgery) |
Density and subtypes of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in the tumor microenvironment. | Histopathological assessment of the density and subtypes of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Immunohistochemistry technique will be used. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Desmoplasia in the tumor microenvironment. | Histopathological assessment of desmoplasia in the tumor microenvironment. Immunohistochemistry technique will be used. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Neural markers in the tumor microenvironment. | Histopathological assessment of neural marker expression (e.g., NGF, BDNF, tyrosin hydroxylase) Immunohistochemistry technique will be used. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Adrenergic receptor (ADRB1&ADRB2) expression in the tumor microenvironment. | Histopathological assessment of the expression of adrenergic receptors (ADRB1 and ADRB2). Immunohistochemistry technique will be used for this purpose. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Spatial distribution of immune cells in the tumor microenvironment. | Spatial distribution of immune cells in the tumor microenvironment using Immunohistochemistry technique and NanoString GeoMx techniques will be used for this purpose. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Immune cells and subtypes in blood samples | Assessing the number and subsets of immune cells in the obtained blood samples before and after propranolol treatment and between the two arms (propranolol versus placebo). This will be examined through FlowCytometry. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Circulating tumor cells before and after intervention in blood samples. | Assessment of circulating tumor cells in blood samples before and after intervention. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
RNA-level gene expression in blood samples. | RNA-level expression of genes related to immune-surveillance through NanoString nCounter technique. | Through study completion. At latest within 1 year from last participant completes trial. |
Heart rate variability in both trial arms | Examining differences in heart rate variability among participants and between intervention and comparator group. | Through study completion, an average of 1 year. |
Postoperative complications | Assessment of postoperative complications based on the Clavien-Dindo Score (CD) ranging from I to V, where I is any decline from normal postoperative course and V is death of patient. | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Survival 30-days after surgery | Assessment of survival 30 days after surgery. | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Survival 90-days after surgery | Assessment of survival 90 days after surgery. | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Overall survival 1-year after surgery | Assessment of overall surival 1-year after surgery | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Overall survival 3-years after surgery | Assessment of overall survival 3-years after surgery | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Overall survival 5-years after surgery | Assessment of overall survival 5-years after surgery | After participant finishes trial and when last follow up (5 years from surgery) date is due. |
Secondary Outcome Measures | Measure Description | Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Safety of 40 mg propranolol twice daily on blood pressure. | Examining the safety of preoperative propranolol 40 mg twice daily prior to elective surgery for pancreatic cancer by continuous at-home measurements of blood pressure twice daily during the intervention period. | Through study completion, within 14 days after surgery. |
Safety of 40 mg propranolol twice daily on heart rate. | Examining the safety of preoperative propranolol 40 mg twice daily prior to elective surgery for pancreatic cancer by continuous at-home measurements of heart rate twice daily during the intervention period. | Through study completion, within 14 days after surgery. |
This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.
Study Contact Name: Ismail Gögenur, Professor Phone Number: +4547323181 Email: igo@regionsjaelland.dk |
Study Contact Backup Name: Adile Orhan, MD Phone Number: +4560807762 Email: aor@regionsjaelland.dk |
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person’s general health condition or prior treatments.
Ages Eligible for Study:
ALL
Sexes Eligible for Study:
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.
The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.
General Publications
No publications available
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