View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:The Olanzapine Regimen will be superior to the Standard Regimen, as measured by the proportion of patients with Complete Response in the 120 hours following AC chemotherapy.
This was an open label, multi-center protocol for U.S. patients enrolled in the study of ribociclib with endocrine therapy as an adjuvant treatment in patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, high risk early breast cancer
BREAKOUT -International Breast Cancer Biomarker, Standard of Care and Real World Outcomes Study BREAKOUT is a prospective cross-sectional cohort study of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 negative metastatic breast cancer patients who have started 1st line systemic cytotoxic chemotherapy. The study will estimate the prevalence of germline breast cancer susceptibility gene in an otherwise unselected population, describe the treatments administered and estimate the associated clinical outcomes of overall survival and progression-free survival amongst mutation carriers within the context of a low poly ADP ribose polymerase inhibitor treatment setting. Other exploratory analyses may be undertaken to describe somatic breast cancer susceptibility gene and other homologous recombination repair gene mutations.
Fluzoparib is an oral potent, selective poly-ADP ribose polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and PARP-2 inhibitor; Apatinib is an oral selective vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) inhibitor. This open-label, dose finding phase I trial studies the tolerability and the best dose of fluzoparib in combination with apatinib and to see how well these two drugs work together in the treatment of patients with recurrent ovarian cancer or triple negative breast cancer. The safety and efficacy of fluzoparib in combination with apatinib will be explored. Both dose escalation and dose expansion parts are included in this study.
The aim of this study is to assess benefits of treatment with intravenous Curcumin® (CUC-01) vs placebo, in combination with paclitaxel chemotherapy, and to estimate the risk of adverse events in patients with locally advanced and metastatic breast cancer. This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, two arms parallel group phase 2 clinical trial: Group A, 75 patients, treatment with Curcumin (CUC-01, yellow solution), 300mg i.v. plus i.v. Paclitaxel (colorless solution) 80 mg /m2 BS i.e., once weekly for 12 weeks. Group B, 75 patients, treatment with Paclitaxel (colorless solution) 80 mg /m2 BS, i.v. plus placebo i.v. solution (250 ml, yellow solution for masking/blinding), once weekly for 12 weeks. Primary objective of the study: To assess: - Efficacy of combined therapy with Curcumin ®, (CUC-01) and Paclitaxel vs Paclitaxel in patients with advanced and metastatic breast cancer in terms of Objective Response Rate (ORR) assessed with the Modified Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumours (RECIST). Secondary objectives of the study: To assess: - The safety of Curcumin+Paclitaxel combination compared to Paclitaxel+placebo treatment by assessment of adverse effects. - Quality of life (QOL) in patient treated with Curcumin+Paclitaxel combination compared to Paclitaxel+Placebo - Response duration in terms of Progression free survival (PFS), Time to Disease Progression (TTP) and Time to treatment failure (TTTF)
Distress monitoring is an important issue in cancer survivors. However, conventional distress screening is very difficult to perform. This study investigates the efficacy of wearable device as a tool of distress monitoring in breast cancer survivors.
The purpose of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to evaluate a decision support website (RealRisks) designed to inform patients about breast cancer prevention options. It is coupled with a physician-centered (BNAV) decision support website as part of clinical workflow in the primary care setting. The investigators hypothesize that improving accuracy of breast cancer risk perception and understanding of the risks and benefits of breast cancer risk lowering drugs, also known as chemoprevention, will increase the uptake of chemoprevention in the primary care setting.
This is a single arm, open label study of SV-BR-1-GM, a targeted immunotherapy for breast cancer. Eligible patients will have histological confirmation of breast cancer with recurrent and/or metastatic lesions. The treatment regimen includes a pre-treatment with low-dose cyclophosphamide 2-3 days before the inoculation; inoculation in 4 sites on the thighs and upper back; and post-treatment inoculation of Interferon-alpha-2b into the sites of inoculation ~2 and ~4 days after the inoculation. These is repeated every 2 weeks for one month (3 treatments), then monthly for up to one year. Standard tumor assessments are performed at baseline and then every 2-3 months.
This is an open-label, single arm, phase 2 trial that will include pre or post-menopausal female subjects, that have ER-positive, HER2-negative early breast cancer. Subject will receive 4 cycles of palbociclib 125 mg (each cycle of palbociclib consists of treatment from D1 to D21 followed by a week of rest) combined with endocrine therapy given continuously (each cycle of endocrine therapy consists of treatment from D1 to D28). The endocrine therapy will be determined according to the menopausal status of the subject evaluated at the study screening.
The objective of this observational study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the dietary supplementation "OnLife" in improving signs and symptoms of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) in adult patients who have finished adjuvant oxaliplatin-containing regimen (colon cancer) or adjuvant paclitaxel regimen (breast cancer). Furthermore, patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and concomitant medication used for the treatment of neuropathic pain will be assessed.