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STING MARK Universal Fiducial Marker System

STING MARK Universal Fiducial Marker System

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Currently available fiducial marker and fiducial insertion strategies are rudimentary, imprecise, not compatible with multiple insertion catheters/needles and are overall unreliable. STING-MARK device is the first universal, fully detachable and non-premounted radiopaque fiducial device system. Allowing biopsy prior to insertion, STING-MARK is easily and reliably delivered through-the-needle to the tumor, in order to accurately pinpoint its location for image-guided therapies. This study aims at establishing proof of concept for STING-MARK, by demonstrating its usability, reproducibility, radio-opacity and retention in a variety of clinically-relevant ex vivo organ samples.

Description

Patients undergoing surgical resection of solid organs at the CHUM or recipients of solid organ transplantation will be approached for consent into the study protocol. Human solid organs that are being removed for either elective surgery or transplantation will be removed in the standard manner and sent to the pathology laboratory as in the typical situation following removal. After the pathology team finishes with the organ, excess organ will be given to the research team for experimentation. In cases of recipient organs being removed for transplantation, they will be preserved in a plastic bag and then placed in the refrigerator. All experimentation will take place in the CRCHUM TID lab or Room 13 of the CHUM operating room.

Device insertion will occur with the designated needles and through the appropriate organ-specific route and imaging guidance. Multiple STING-MARK fiducials will be inserted. Plain film x-rays in 3 planes of the organs with the marker inserted will be taken and recorded.

Following experimentation, the organs will be appropriately labelled and returned to the pathology laboratory at the CHUM.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients undergoing surgical resection of solid organs
  • Recipients of solid organ transplantation

Exclusion Criteria:

  • None

Study details
    Cancer

NCT05465161

Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)

28 January 2024

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FAQs

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A clinical trial is a study designed to test specific interventions or treatments' effectiveness and safety, paving the way for new, innovative healthcare solutions.

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