The Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology is now enrolling patients into a clinical trial aimed at helping women recover from the vaginal side effects of breast cancer treatment. Supported in part by a grant from the National Cancer Institute, the REVITALIZE study ( Alliance A221801 ) will test if a laser therapy helps reduce vaginal dryness caused by breast cancer treatment, a painful side effect that can cause discomfort for many cancer survivors.
“This study addresses an unmet supportive care need for breast cancer survivors,” said Maryam Lustberg, MD, MPH, study chair and Professor of Medical Oncology at Yale University Comprehensive Cancer Center. “By using a randomized, placebo-controlled design and patient-reported outcomes, REVITALIZE aims to provide clear evidence to guide patients and clinicians on how to reduce the long-term genitourinary side effects of breast cancer treatment to improve quality of life.”
The study is co-led by Don Dizon, MD, the Jane F. Desforges, M.D., Chair in Hematology and Oncology at Tufts University School of Medicine, and Allison Quick, MD, Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology from The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Vaginal dryness and related symptoms are common and often persistent side effects experienced by breast cancer survivors, particularly among women who are postmenopausal and/or receiving long-term endocrine therapies such as aromatase inhibitors or tamoxifen. These symptoms can have a significant impact on quality of life, intimacy, and overall well-being. Current treatment options are limited, especially for patients who cannot use estrogen-based therapies.
The REVITALIZE trial is designed to evaluate whether vaginal fractional CO₂ laser therapy provides symptom relief. While laser-based therapies are increasingly used in clinical practice, high-quality randomized data in breast cancer survivors are limited.
Vaginal CO₂ laser therapy is a minimally invasive procedure that lasts about 15 minutes. Clinicians insert a tiny probe into the vagina where it emits tiny pulses of light energy to the tissue. This energy creates tiny micro-injuries to the tissue to stimulate blood flow and spark new collagen production. After a few sessions, many patients report increased tissue elasticity, additional moisture and more resilience.
REVITALIZE plans to enroll approximately 250 women with a history of breast cancer who experience moderate to severe vaginal dryness. Participants are randomized to receive either:
Treatments are administered every six weeks for a total of three sessions. Participants will be followed for up to 24 months after treatment to assess both short- and long-term outcomes. Patients randomly assigned to the placebo group will have the option of receiving laser therapy after the three placebo sessions.
The primary objective of the study is to determine whether laser therapy improves the severity of vaginal dryness, measured using an 11-point patient-reported scale. Secondary objectives include evaluating vaginal discomfort during sexual activity, overall quality of life, and the incidence of treatment-related side effects.
“Supportive care research is a growing priority in oncology, as treatments continue to improve and some survivors can expect to live many decades after their initial treatment ends,” Dr. Lustberg added. “Findings from the REVITALIZE trial are expected to inform evidence-based recommendations for managing painful symptoms in breast cancer survivors impacting quality of life and may influence clinical guidelines nationwide.”
For more information on Alliance A221801: The Revitalize Trial: Reducing Vaginal Atrophy With Fractional CO2 Laser for Breast Cancer Survivors, visit ClinicalTrials.gov .
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The Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology is a national leader in advancing cancer research, uniting more than 25,000 cancer specialists at 115 main institutions and 1,400 affiliates across the U.S. and Canada. As part of the National Clinical Trials Network and a leading research base for the NCI Community Oncology Research Program, the Alliance conducts pioneering, practice-changing clinical trials that improve outcomes and reshape standards of care. Its work has led to multiple FDA approvals, influenced national guidelines, and produced hundreds of high-impact publications. More than 40,000 participants have taken part in Alliance studies, and its growing biospecimen repository now includes more than 1.5 million samples, collected over the past 30 years. Learn more at www.AllianceforClinicalTrialsinOncology.org .
Randomized controlled/clinical trial
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