View clinical trials related to Breast Cancer.
Filter by:A common complication of breast conserving therapy is breast edema, which may lead to chronic pain, but also reduced quality of life (QoL) and poor cosmetic outcome. When pain is present most patients are currently treated with physical therapy, but evidence of its effectiveness is still low and a gold standard does not yet exist. A downside of physical therapy is that patients have to undergo the therapy regularly and treatment might even has to continue for years after symptoms and treatment started. Another treatment option is a compression vest with the potential, apart from reducing symptoms, to improve self-efficacy in patients because they decide when to wear it without the need to visit therapists. However effectiveness of the compression vest has not yet been objectified in studies. The aim of this pilot study is to study if there is an effect on pain, QoL and the amount of breast edema of wearing a compression vest, in order to determine whether a large randomized study is feasible.
This first-in-human, open-label, multicenter, Phase Ia/Ib, adaptive, multiple ascending-dose study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and preliminary anti-tumor activity of RO6874281 as a single agent (Part A) or in combination with trastuzumab or cetuximab (Part B or C).
The aim of the present study is: 1. to verify whether the delineation of the tumour bed, based on the combination of the visible postoperative changes and the position of the surgical clips on a CT scan in treatment position acquired 1 week before the start of the radiotherapy (RT), provides an accurate localisation of the boost volume compared to the localisation of the tumour on a pre-operative CT-scan. 2. to document the changes that occur in the tumour bed as seen on a CT scan as a function of the delay between surgery and radiotherapy. 3. to determine the ideal number and the positioning of the clips needed to reproduce the best treatment volume for the boost. 4. to propose new guidelines for tumour bed definition and delineation based on the study findings.
This multicenter, prospectively designed study examines whether the Prosigna score influences physician and patient adjuvant treatment selection over and above currently used prognostic factors. This study also examines the impact of the test results on patients' reported outcomes, including their decisional conflict status and anxiety levels.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the addition of tramadol combined with levobupivacaine in the reduction of postoperative pain, postoperative opioid consumption after modified radical mastectomy surgery.
The primary objective of the open-label, dose-escalation study is to investigate the safety of single-dose monotherapy and repeated-dose of KHK2375 combined with exemestane in female subjects with advanced or recurrent breast cancer. The secondary objective is to investigate the pharmacokinetics and efficacy.
The investigators aim to evaluate the effect of a 6-month intervention (counseling) focused on weight loss in a group of overweight or obese women previously treated for early breast cancer. Intervention is designed to improve adherence to a healthy diet or/and to increase physical activity and decrease sedentary time, taking advantage of a pedometer-like device.
This study is to assess the pharmacokinetics (PK) of a single dose of pravastatin with and without concomitant GDC-0810 administration in healthy female subjects of non-childbearing potential. During Period 1 (Day -1 to Day 4) PK parameters of pravastatin will be determined in the absence of GDC-0810. During Period 2 (Days 5-28) PK parameters of pravastatin will be determined in the presence of GDC-0810.
Breast cancer can be painful following surgery or can develop later and remain persistent. Pain occurrence is frequent with 50% of women developing sequelae pain of varying intensity with an impact on the quality of life. One of the priorities of the 3rd French Cancer Plan is to preserve quality of life. Osteopathy, complementary therapy, may help to reduce inconvenience caused by the disease, treatments and their side effects (asthenia, anxiety and pain). The main objective is to assess the impact of osteopathic treatment on pain in patients following breast cancer surgery. The impact will be considered beneficial if the pain score (digital scale) in the intervention group is lower, by at least two points, than the pain score in the control group at the end of the study. This is a monocentric, randomized, parallel group, single-blind and prospective clinical trial.
This study aims to compare the analgesic efficacy and safety of local bupivacaine alone versus bupivacaine plus ketamine in ultrasound guided modified Pecs block in patients undergoing breast cancer surgery.