The PRECISION Study: A Phase II Study of 3 Fractions of Prostate SBRT With RayPilot System and HypoCath Image Guidance for Men With NCCN Low or Intermediate Risk Prostate Cancer
The investigators want to investigate whether it is possible to reduce the number of curative radiotherapy doses from 5 to only 3 for men with localized early prostate cancer. The aim of the study is to ensure that the side effects of the 3-dose treatment are the same or potentially lower than those already published when using the 5-dose treatment as used in the UK PACE-B trial (NCT01584258). The name of this type of radiotherapy is Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) or participants may see it referred to as Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy (SABR). The study is a two-stage single arm Phase II study open to those Centres that use the RayPilot HypoCath tumour tracking system (Micropos Medical). This commercially available system was not available at the time of the original PACE-B study. The system acts like a Global Positioning Device (GPS) to continuously track the prostate position during radiotherapy. If the prostate moves more than 2mm (about 0.08 in) from its intended position during the treatment, then the radiotherapy team are alerted, and the treatment halted until the prostate moves back into the correct position. The ability to understand exactly where the prostate is throughout the treatment ensures the intended dose hits the cancer and does not accidentally increase the dose to the nearby bladder and rectum. The system is a modification of a standard urinary catheter which sits within the bladder with the GPS placed within the wall of the catheter as it passes through the prostate. The investigators are not testing the system as it is commercially available but using it to improve the accuracy of radiotherapy delivery, reducing the number of days of treatment, minimizing side effects and helping ease the burden on busy radiotherapy Departments.
Is the Rate of Early Mobilisation in Hip Fracture Patients Using Alfentanil Better Than Standard Opioid Analgesia (REHAB): a Prospective Cohort Study
Hip fracture injuries are linked with increased morbidity, frailty, and mortality risk. Studies have shown that in hip fracture surgery, early mobilisation confers better pain control, 30-day complication and mortality rates and could reduce in hospital length of stay. Though early mobilisation may provide numerous post operative benefits, there are barriers to achieving this reliably and effectively. One such difficulty is pain. In the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (RIE) like many boards across Scotland, oral oxycodone has been routinely used as analgesia to help with post operative pain, in patients who have undergone orthopaedic trauma injuries. However, this analgesic modality is utilised to help with general post operative pain, rather than targeted abolition of pain prior to physiotherapy. Alfentanil is a relatively new medication which has a very rapid onset of action and short half life. Alfentanil may prove to be a superior form of analgesia for the purpose of encouraging early mobilisation after hip fracture surgery. This study could provide robust evidence for regular use of alfentanil prior to physiotherapy in early post operative hip fracture surgery patients.
Performance of Tampons as a Biospecimen Collection Tool for the Detection of Human Papillomavirus in a Colposcopy Setting
Evaluation of the clinical performance of the Daye Diagnostic Tampon (DDT) for the detection of Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) infection associated with high grade cervical disease. Cross sectional design with comparison to a clinician taken biospecimen. Performance will be measured relative to the presence/absence of histologically confirmed disease