View clinical trials related to Breast Cancer.
Filter by:Breast cancer ranks first among the cancers seen in women in the World. Due to breast cancer, patients experience spiritual distress. The aim of this study is to determine the effect of mindfulness-based stress reduction program applied to patients with breast cancer on spiritual well-being.
The purpose of this study to find out whether mirdametinib is a safe treatment for people with advanced solid tumor cancer that has certain mutations. Researchers will look at whether mirdametinib on its own or in combination with the drug fulvestrant is a safe treatment that causes few or mild side effects in people with advanced solid tumor cancer.
The study aimed to investigate the efficacy of the everolimus-containing chemotherapy in metastatic breast cancer patients with PI3K/AKT/mTOR mutations.14 cases of HER2- metastatic breast cancer patients with PI3K/AKT/mTOR mutations treated with everolimus-containing chemotherapy were retrospectively analyzed.The genetic profile in PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway was studied.
Metformin is an anti-diabetic oral hypoglycemic agent that considered the gold standard therapy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Retrospective analyses show that metformin can offer therapeutic benefits to patients with several forms of cancer. It also has positive weight reducing effect on non-diabetic patient by improving insulin sensitivity (although the exact underlying pathomechanisms remain to be elucidated).
Breast cancer is the most frequently observed cancer in women in France.The mortality rate is still decreasing with a decrease of 1.6% per year between 2010 and 2018, explained by the improvement in available treatments.For patients with breast cancer expressing hormone receptors, treatment with Tamoxifen or anti-aromatase can have the risk of the cancer coming back.However, these treatments have many side effects, including the risk of osteoporosis and metabolic disorders with anti-aromatases; and arterial and thromboembolic accidents with Tamoxifen.These effects have been well studied while taking hormone therapy.However, very few studies have analyzed the impact of these treatments after stopping them in women who have had non-metastatic hormone-sensitive breast cancer and uncertainties persist on the evolution of the health risk after initial treatment.
The purpose of this observational study is to assess whether the use of AI (Transpara®) can lead to an improved quality of a double reading mammography screening program. This is investigated by performing AI as a third reader and as a decision support during the consensus meeting, compared with conventional mammography screening (double reading and consensus without AI).
This study tests a novel, risk-stratified approach for low risk breast cancer survivor follow-up care that reduces burden for survivors and their oncologists while simultaneously delivering more comprehensive care. The intervention is called Remote Electronic Assessment of Survivors with Feedback Communication and Directed Referrals (REASSURE). 50 participants will be enrolled into 2 cohorts, 25 into cohort 1 who will experience the REASSURE intervention 6 months from enrollment and 25 into cohort 2 who will experience components of the REASSURE intervention at their next follow-up visit. Participants can expect to be on study for up to 9 months.
Participants will be randomly assigned to either the time restricted feeding group with a daily eating period of 8 hours or the control group with a daily eating period of greater than or equal to 12 hours. There are 2 in-person study visits to have blood, urine and vital signs collected and 8 remote or phone visits with a psychologist or dietician to assist with the eating schedule. The study will take last 3 1/2 months.
This clinical trial investigates contrast-enhanced mammography (CEM) in detecting breast cancer. CEM is similar to standard mammography, but it includes an injection of an iodine-based contrast, which makes tissue and blood vessels more visible in scans. Diagnostic procedures, such as CEM, may increase the chance of finding breast cancers and decrease the risk of having unnecessary biopsies.
This study aims to describe in detail the patient journey from diagnosis to the beginning of treatment and patterns of care of hormone receptor- positive, HER2-negative de novo or recurrent metastatic breast cancer between January 2018 and December 2020 in Brazil.