View clinical trials related to Bladder Cancer.
Filter by:This research study is studying the safety, tolerability, and tumor activity of the study drug known as rogaratinib as a possible treatment for bladder cancer.
Radical radiation therapy for prostate cancer is a common treatment that has shown to improve clinical outcomes in a post-operative setting. However, radiation therapy after surgery poses a greater risk for bladder and rectum injury for patients with prostate or bladder cancer. For prostate cancer patients, the risk is further amplified when pelvic nodes are part of the target irradiated volume. For bladder cancer patients, the risk of injury increases when more of the bladder is part of the target volume. Using an adaptive radiation therapy approach allows for correcting any shifts in the target volume. ART approach uses images from treatment to adapt the treatment plan. This study will use Adaptive Radiation Therapy for patients who receive pelvic nodal radiotherapy for either prostate or bladder cancer. Their treatment plans will adapted using MRI scans and CBCT scans taken during their first week of radiotherapy to account for any shifts in the target volume. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of ART approach and its and on treatment plan quality metrics for pelvic radiotherapy. Acute and late toxicities will also be evaluated. 40 participants (minimum of 10 bladder cancer patients) will be enrolled. The participants will be followed for a period of 5 years post radiation therapy, during which they will have PSA as per standard practice, along with follow-up questionnaires (EPIC for prostate cancer patients and BUSS for bladder cancer patients).
The main purpose of this study is to see if Prostaphane is effective and can help reduce the progression of bladder cancer. Researchers also want to find out if Prostaphane is safe and tolerable, and to evaluate how Prostaphane works to reduce the progression of bladder cancer. This study will compare Prostaphane with a placebo to see if taking Prostaphane is better than taking a placebo. A placebo is a pill that looks like Prostaphane but has no drug or other active ingredients in it. The study will be presented to eligible patients by the patient's surgeon at the time when an appointment is made for cystoscopy for suspicion of bladder cancer (BC) or to confirm BC diagnosis.
The study is a multi-site Phase 3 double-blinded randomized placebo-controlled trial. Subjects are randomly assigned to receive either a placebo or oral Sirolimus: 0.5 mg daily. All subjects will be treated for 2 years or until disease recurrence. Patients will undergo endoscopic evaluation of the bladder every 3 months for the first 2 years following enrollment and then every 6 months for an additional 2 years on study. Selection of BCG immune therapy is at the discretion of the treating urologist but in general is reserved for high-risk patients. Patients concurrently receiving BCG immune therapy will receive standard BCG therapy including induction (weekly for 6 weeks) and maintenance (weekly for 3 weeks at 3 months, 6 months, and then every 6 months following tumor resection).
This is a multi-site, randomized, prospective, open-label phase II study. Patients in this study will have localized (cT3-cT4), or metastatic bladder cancer with a symptomatic, intact primary bladder tumor. In this study, patients will undergo stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) to the bladder tumor and will receive durvalumab with or without tremelimumab.
This study will help to elucidate the treatment sites in the extremities and pelvis for which MR-guided HIFU heating is feasible, which has the potential to be beneficial for patients with conditions at those sites (soft tissue sarcoma, cervical cancer, etc.). The investigators anticipate that successful completion of this study will lead to clinical trials in those feasible sites of interest to determine the safety and efficacy of administering therapeutic levels of heat for hyperthermia or other applications.
Phase Ib/II study assessing the neo-adjuvant combination therapy of vinflunine with cisplatin followed by radical cystectomy in patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (JaNEO).
This multicenter, prospective, single-arm, phase 3 study will assess the proportion of disease-free patients, starting from administration of the first study treatment to at least 12-months after the first treatment, and up to 2 years (the latter only in patients choosing to participate in longer-term disease-free-survival data collection).
This is an expanded access protocol to study the safety and efficacy of CG0070 in Cis and Cis with Ta and/or T1 disease patients who failed both BCG therapy and the BOND protocol (NCT 01438112), or in high grade Ta and T1 patients who failed BCG therapy.
Can a commercially available vibrating chair increase the number of urothelial cells in a urine sample of healthy participants non-invasively? The investigators plan is participants will alternate 15 minutes of drinking eight fluid ounces of water and 15 minutes of sitting in the vibrating chair for one hour. The control group will alternate 15 minutes of drinking eight fluid ounces of water and 15 minutes of sitting in a non-vibrating chair for one hour. Then, urine samples will be collected and examined for urothelial cell concentration for both groups.