Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation. / Egeland, Charlotte; Baeksgaard, Lene; Gehl, Julie; Gogenur, Ismail; Achiam, Michael Patrick.

I: Cancers, Bind 14, Nr. 21, 5283, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Egeland, C, Baeksgaard, L, Gehl, J, Gogenur, I & Achiam, MP 2022, 'Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation', Cancers, bind 14, nr. 21, 5283. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215283

APA

Egeland, C., Baeksgaard, L., Gehl, J., Gogenur, I., & Achiam, M. P. (2022). Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation. Cancers, 14(21), [5283]. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215283

Vancouver

Egeland C, Baeksgaard L, Gehl J, Gogenur I, Achiam MP. Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation. Cancers. 2022;14(21). 5283. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215283

Author

Egeland, Charlotte ; Baeksgaard, Lene ; Gehl, Julie ; Gogenur, Ismail ; Achiam, Michael Patrick. / Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation. I: Cancers. 2022 ; Bind 14, Nr. 21.

Bibtex

@article{78ac249f04bb431bb3d4b79c0f533c6f,
title = "Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation",
abstract = "Simple Summary Calcium electroporation is a new cancer therapy wherein a high, rapid influx of calcium, facilitated by electrical pulses, is used to kill cancer cells. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of this new treatment for patients with non-curable esophageal cancer. The treatment was administrated during an endoscopic examination, under general anesthesia, and in an outpatient setting. Eight patients were treated. One severe adverse event occurred (requiring a single blood transfusion) and another three mild side effects were seen. Two patients reported dysphagia relief after treatment and one patient had a partial response evaluated by CT. Six months after treatment, the same patient was still in good condition, without the need for further treatment. Calcium electroporation was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. More studies are warranted to evaluate clinical efficacy. Calcium electroporation (CaEP) is a novel cancer therapy wherein high intracellular calcium levels, facilitated by reversible electroporation, trigger tumor necrosis. This study aimed to establish safety with CaEP within esophageal cancer. Patients with non-curable esophageal cancer were included at Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet in 2021 and 2022. In an outpatient setting, calcium gluconate was injected intratumorally followed by reversible electroporation applied with an endoscopic electrode. The primary endpoint was the prevalence of adverse events, followed by palliation of dysphagia. All patients were evaluated with CT and upper endoscopies up to two months after treatment. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04958044). Eight patients were treated. One serious adverse event (anemia, requiring a single blood transfusion) and three adverse events (mild retrosternal pain (two) and oral thrush (one)) were registered. Initially, six patients suffered from dysphagia: two reported dysphagia relief and four reported no change. From the imaging evaluation, one patient had a partial response, three patients had no response, and four patients had progression. Six months after treatment, the patient who responded well was still in good condition and without the need for further oncological treatment. CaEP was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. This study opens the way for larger studies evaluating tumor regression and symptom palliation.",
keywords = "esophageal cancer, calcium electroporation, malignant dysphagia, palliation, IRREVERSIBLE ELECTROPORATION, TISSUE ABLATION, PHASE-II, ELECTROCHEMOTHERAPY, METASTASES, MELANOMA, TUMORS",
author = "Charlotte Egeland and Lene Baeksgaard and Julie Gehl and Ismail Gogenur and Achiam, {Michael Patrick}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.3390/cancers14215283",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "Cancers",
issn = "2072-6694",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "21",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Palliative Treatment of Esophageal Cancer Using Calcium Electroporation

AU - Egeland, Charlotte

AU - Baeksgaard, Lene

AU - Gehl, Julie

AU - Gogenur, Ismail

AU - Achiam, Michael Patrick

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Simple Summary Calcium electroporation is a new cancer therapy wherein a high, rapid influx of calcium, facilitated by electrical pulses, is used to kill cancer cells. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of this new treatment for patients with non-curable esophageal cancer. The treatment was administrated during an endoscopic examination, under general anesthesia, and in an outpatient setting. Eight patients were treated. One severe adverse event occurred (requiring a single blood transfusion) and another three mild side effects were seen. Two patients reported dysphagia relief after treatment and one patient had a partial response evaluated by CT. Six months after treatment, the same patient was still in good condition, without the need for further treatment. Calcium electroporation was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. More studies are warranted to evaluate clinical efficacy. Calcium electroporation (CaEP) is a novel cancer therapy wherein high intracellular calcium levels, facilitated by reversible electroporation, trigger tumor necrosis. This study aimed to establish safety with CaEP within esophageal cancer. Patients with non-curable esophageal cancer were included at Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet in 2021 and 2022. In an outpatient setting, calcium gluconate was injected intratumorally followed by reversible electroporation applied with an endoscopic electrode. The primary endpoint was the prevalence of adverse events, followed by palliation of dysphagia. All patients were evaluated with CT and upper endoscopies up to two months after treatment. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04958044). Eight patients were treated. One serious adverse event (anemia, requiring a single blood transfusion) and three adverse events (mild retrosternal pain (two) and oral thrush (one)) were registered. Initially, six patients suffered from dysphagia: two reported dysphagia relief and four reported no change. From the imaging evaluation, one patient had a partial response, three patients had no response, and four patients had progression. Six months after treatment, the patient who responded well was still in good condition and without the need for further oncological treatment. CaEP was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. This study opens the way for larger studies evaluating tumor regression and symptom palliation.

AB - Simple Summary Calcium electroporation is a new cancer therapy wherein a high, rapid influx of calcium, facilitated by electrical pulses, is used to kill cancer cells. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of this new treatment for patients with non-curable esophageal cancer. The treatment was administrated during an endoscopic examination, under general anesthesia, and in an outpatient setting. Eight patients were treated. One severe adverse event occurred (requiring a single blood transfusion) and another three mild side effects were seen. Two patients reported dysphagia relief after treatment and one patient had a partial response evaluated by CT. Six months after treatment, the same patient was still in good condition, without the need for further treatment. Calcium electroporation was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. More studies are warranted to evaluate clinical efficacy. Calcium electroporation (CaEP) is a novel cancer therapy wherein high intracellular calcium levels, facilitated by reversible electroporation, trigger tumor necrosis. This study aimed to establish safety with CaEP within esophageal cancer. Patients with non-curable esophageal cancer were included at Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet in 2021 and 2022. In an outpatient setting, calcium gluconate was injected intratumorally followed by reversible electroporation applied with an endoscopic electrode. The primary endpoint was the prevalence of adverse events, followed by palliation of dysphagia. All patients were evaluated with CT and upper endoscopies up to two months after treatment. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04958044). Eight patients were treated. One serious adverse event (anemia, requiring a single blood transfusion) and three adverse events (mild retrosternal pain (two) and oral thrush (one)) were registered. Initially, six patients suffered from dysphagia: two reported dysphagia relief and four reported no change. From the imaging evaluation, one patient had a partial response, three patients had no response, and four patients had progression. Six months after treatment, the patient who responded well was still in good condition and without the need for further oncological treatment. CaEP was conducted in eight patients with only a few side effects. This study opens the way for larger studies evaluating tumor regression and symptom palliation.

KW - esophageal cancer

KW - calcium electroporation

KW - malignant dysphagia

KW - palliation

KW - IRREVERSIBLE ELECTROPORATION

KW - TISSUE ABLATION

KW - PHASE-II

KW - ELECTROCHEMOTHERAPY

KW - METASTASES

KW - MELANOMA

KW - TUMORS

U2 - 10.3390/cancers14215283

DO - 10.3390/cancers14215283

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36358702

VL - 14

JO - Cancers

JF - Cancers

SN - 2072-6694

IS - 21

M1 - 5283

ER -

ID: 329616966