Browsing by Author "Ghadjar, Pirus (13403994400)"
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Publication Current status and perspectives of interventional clinical trials for glioblastoma - analysis of ClinicalTrials.gov(2017) ;Cihoric, Nikola (55325998600) ;Tsikkinis, Alexandros (56862150700) ;Minniti, Giuseppe (7003878157) ;Lagerwaard, Frank J (6603441311) ;Herrlinger, Ulrich (7004037087) ;Mathier, Etienne (56703345100) ;Soldatovic, Ivan (35389846900) ;Jeremic, Branislav (7005009126) ;Ghadjar, Pirus (13403994400) ;Elicin, Olgun (55757119600) ;Lössl, Kristina (36963968700) ;Aebersold, Daniel M (6701543931) ;Belka, Claus (57217798849) ;Herrmann, Evelyn (56992501500)Niyazi, Maximilian (16307758800)The records of 208.777 (100%) clinical trials registered at ClinicalTrials.gov were downloaded on the 19th of February 2016. Phase II and III trials including patients with glioblastoma were selected for further classification and analysis. Based on the disease settings, trials were classified into three groups: newly diagnosed glioblastoma, recurrent disease and trials with no differentiation according to disease setting. Furthermore, we categorized trials according to the experimental interventions, the primary sponsor, the source of financial support and trial design elements. Trends were evaluated using the autoregressive integrated moving average model. Two hundred sixteen (0.1%) trials were selected for further analysis. Academic centers (investigator initiated trials) were recorded as primary sponsors in 56.9% of trials, followed by industry 25.9%. Industry was the leading source of monetary support for the selected trials in 44.4%, followed by 25% of trials with primarily academic financial support. The number of newly initiated trials between 2005 and 2015 shows a positive trend, mainly through an increase in phase II trials, whereas phase III trials show a negative trend. The vast majority of trials evaluate forms of different systemic treatments (91.2%). In total, one hundred different molecular entities or biologicals were identified. Of those, 60% were involving drugs specifically designed for central nervous system malignancies. Trials that specifically address radiotherapy, surgery, imaging and other therapeutic or diagnostic methods appear to be rare. Current research in glioblastoma is mainly driven or sponsored by industry, academic medical oncologists and neuro-oncologists, with the majority of trials evaluating forms of systemic therapies. Few trials reach phase III. Imaging, radiation therapy and surgical procedures are underrepresented in current trials portfolios. Optimization in research portfolio for glioblastoma is needed. © 2017 The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Portfolio of prospective clinical trials including brachytherapy: An analysis of the ClinicalTrials.gov database(2016) ;Cihoric, Nikola (55325998600) ;Tsikkinis, Alexandros (56862150700) ;Miguelez, Cristina Gutierrez (8588763000) ;Strnad, Vratislav (7006248656) ;Soldatovic, Ivan (35389846900) ;Ghadjar, Pirus (13403994400) ;Jeremic, Branislav (7005009126) ;Dal Pra, Alan (37092656000) ;Aebersold, Daniel M. (6701543931)Lössl, Kristina (36963968700)Background: To evaluate the current status of prospective interventional clinical trials that includes brachytherapy (BT) procedures. Methods: The records of 175,538 (100%) clinical trials registered at ClinicalTrials.gov were downloaded on September 2014 and a database was established. Trials using BT as an intervention were identified for further analyses. The selected trials were manually categorized according to indication(s), BT source, applied dose rate, primary sponsor type, location, protocol initiator and funding source. We analyzed trials across 8 available trial protocol elements registered within the database. Results: In total 245 clinical trials were identified, 147 with BT as primary investigated treatment modality and 98 that included BT as an optional treatment component or as part of the standard treatment. Academic centers were the most frequent protocol initiators in trials where BT was the primary investigational treatment modality (p < 0.01). High dose rate (HDR) BT was the most frequently investigated type of BT dose rate (46.3%) followed by low dose rate (LDR) (42.0%). Prostate was the most frequently investigated tumor entity in trials with BT as the primary treatment modality (40.1%) followed by breast cancer (17.0%). BT was rarely the primary investigated treatment modality for cervical cancer (6.8%). Conclusion: Most clinical trials using BT are predominantly in early phases, investigator-initiated and with low accrual numbers. Current investigational activities that include BT mainly focus on prostate and breast cancers. Important questions concerning the optimal usage of BT will not be answered in the near future. © 2016 Cihoric et al.
