View clinical trials related to Breast Cancer.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of adding bolus in adjuvant radiotherapy after mastectomy, in relation to the time of treatment interruption and acute effects. This study evaluates whether there is an increase in treatment time with the addition of the bolus, which can overshadow the benefit of increased dose to the skin and subcutaneous tissue. The patients will continue to be followed for oncologic outcomes, focusing on chest wall local control.
A new test for breast cancer screening, molecular breast imaging (MBI) may be more sensitive than mammography for detecting breast cancer in women with dense breasts. The purpose of this study is to see if MBI using a low dose of gamma radiation can find cancers not seen on mammography. Hypotheses: 1. Low-Dose MBI has a significantly higher sensitivity and specificity and equal or higher positive predictive value than SM in women age 40 and older with mammographically dense breasts. 2. Low-dose MBI has comparable sensitivity and specificity to that previously achieved with MBI using a higher dose of radiation. 3. MBI produces a low false positive rate (specificity >90%) that permits its use as a screening tool in this patient population.
The purpose of the study was to determine whether treatment with a PI3K inhibitor plus letrozole led to an increase in pathologic clinical response and Objective Response Rate compared to treatment with placebo plus letrozole in patients with Breast cancer.
This multicenter, open-label dose-escalation study with an extension phase will evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of lumretuzumab in combination with pertuzumab and paclitaxel in participants with metastatic breast cancer expressing HER3 and HER2 protein. Cohorts of participants will receive escalating doses of lumretuzumab intravenously (IV) every three weeks (Q3W) in combination with pertuzumab 840 milligrams (mg) IV initial dose followed by 420 mg IV Q3W and paclitaxel 80 milligrams per square meter (mg/m^2) IV weekly. After completion of dose-limiting toxicity period (21 days), the study will be conducted in two extension phase cohorts: Cohort 1 and Cohort 2. Enrollment in Extension Phase Cohort 2 will occur only upon completion of Extension Phase Cohort 1. Anticipated time on study treatment is until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity occurs.
These are tumors which expresses estrogen receptors. Estrogen receptors are found within breast cancer cells and are an important marker of which medicines may best treat a breast cancer. This study is being performed to imaging the amount of estrogen receptors expressed in the tumor. A research agent named 16α-18F-fluoroestradiol (FES) finds estrogen receptors and binds to them. Then tumors with estrogen receptors can be imaged by a PET/CT scanner, a machine that can take pictures of where the FES is and how much FES is present. The results of this study may help researchers know whether FES can be used to monitor changes in estrogen receptors in tumors during treatment.
The purpose of this research is to better understand the relationship between employment and breast cancer. Research is being conducted to understand how workplace factors influence breast cancer patients' ability to adhere to recommended cancer treatment and effectively recover from cancer. Investigators hope to use the findings from the study to help working breast cancer survivors make informed decisions about treatment and employment in collaboration with their employers and healthcare providers.
1) To determine if the Kin KeeperSM Cancer Prevention Intervention increases first time and appropriately timed breast cancer screening rates among Black, Latina and Arab women; 2) To determine if the Kin KeeperSM Cancer Prevention Intervention increase first time and appropriately time cervical cancer screening rates among Black, Latina and Arab women; 3) To measure functional cancer literacy over time at the individual and familial level and 4) Assess rates of healthcare utilization cost among women in the Kin KeeperSM intervention and control-comparison groups.
Women with breast cancer and breast cancer survivors are often bothered by menopausal symptoms to a special degree. Treatment options for those symptoms are currently limited as hormone replacement therapy is often prohibited. Yoga has been shown to reduce menopausal symptoms as well as symptoms associated with breast cancer. Therefore, this study aims to investigate whether a 12-week yoga intervention can reduce menopausal symptoms in women with breast cancer and breast cancer survivors.
Metastatic breast cancer patients with bone involvement who are at high-risk of subsequent skeletal related event (SRE), defined as radiotherapy or surgery to the bone, pathological fracture, spinal cord compression, or hypercalcemia (as reflected through: elevated sCTX or bone pain or a prior SRE despite receiving standard bisphosphonate therapy) should experience a decrease in the surrogate marker, sCTX, at week 12 if switched to zoledronic acid compared with those patients who continue on intravenous pamidronate (i.e. current standard of care). The investigators propose that a drop in sCTX will correlate with improved pain, quality of life and a reduced incidence of further SREs.
This study is intended to support previous positive results of the AeroFormâ„¢ Patient Controlled Tissue Expander System for breast reconstruction