View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:It is a multicenter, open-label, two stage phase II trial, to assess activity, safety and potential early predictors of response in neoadjuvant setting. Patients with operable breast cancer (T1c and cytologically N1-2, or cT2-3, N0-N2, M0) or locally advanced breast cancer (T4a-d, N0-N2, M0) with overexpression or amplification of HER2 (AJCC 7th edition 2010) are included in the study. The primary objective is to evaluate the pathological complete response rate (pCR). The secondary objectives are: - to evaluate the clinical response rate (RR). - to evaluate the feasibility and systemic tolerance, with particular attention to cardiac toxicity. - to evaluate the conservative surgery rate. Total duration of the trial is 36 months; planned treatment are 6 cycles of chemotherapy. At every cycle (every 21 days) will be administered: Day 1: Liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin, 50 mg/m2 IV 1 hour infusion; Day 2 and 9: Docetaxel, 30 mg/m2 IV 1 hour infusion; Day 2, 9 and 16: Trastuzumab 4 mg/kg for the first infusion loading dose, then 2 mg/kg/week for subsequent injections. Day -13 to 0: Metformin is administered as single agent. From day -13 to day -11, Metformin 1000 mg will be administered once a day; from day -10 Metformin 1000 mg will be administered twice a day continuously until end of the study treatment.
Comparison of the number of ER plus hospital visits that occurred during chemotherapy between the telephone intervention and control arms.
The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility of the study protocol. The study protocol was designed to evaluate questions - "Do educational materials improve dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) screening rates for women diagnosed with breast cancer" and "Does educational materials delivered by the participant's selected choice change DXA screening rates compared to the conventional mail method?".
The study is a prospective randomized control clinical trial which is sponsored by the researchers. The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of Gonadotropin-Releasing hormone agonist on ovarian function for premenopausal breast cancer patients during chemotherapy. The premenopausal breast cancer patients will be randomly (1:1) enrolled to receive standard chemotherapy with the GnRH agonist goserelin (goserelin group) or standard chemotherapy without goserelin (chemotherapy alone group). All patients are stratified according to age (<35years vs.36-44years), hormone receptor status (HR+ or ER+ vs.HR- and ER-), chemotherapy regimen(3-4 cycles vs.6-8 cycles, and cyclophosphamide-based vs.noncyclophosphamide).The follow-up time will be at least 2years. The ovarian failure, follicle-stimulating hormone, estradiol and anti-Mullerian hormone, pregnancy outcomes and disease-free and overall survival will be compared between two groups to evaluate the effectiveness of protect against ovarian failure.
This study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Chidamide in combination with exemestane in postmenopausal patients with hormone-receptor positive advanced breast cancer.
This is a randomized intervention study to examine the effects of the Moving Forward Guided Weigh Loss Intervention compared to a self-guided weight loss program on BMI and behavioral, biological, and psychosocial outcomes in overweight and obese African American women diagnosed with Stage I, II, or III breast cancer.
Sentinel node biopsy is a well established tool for axillary staging in early breast cancer. So far the impact of a preoperative lymph node scintigraphy is unclear. This study aims to clarify whether a preoperative lymphoscintigraphy is of additional benefit in a prospective randomized multicenter study design.
This is a Phase 2, open-label, single arm, multicenter, 2-stage study of eribulin mesylate administered biweekly at 1.4 mg/m2 intravenously for the treatment of participants with HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer previously treated with 2 to 5 chemotherapy regimens.
Introduction: physical therapy is essential in preventing motor and functional complications after breast cancer surgery. However, there is no prospective randomized study of different physiotherapy approaches in patients undergoing breast cancer surgery with immediate reconstruction. Objectives: to evaluate two physical therapy protocols in patients after breast cancer surgery with immediate reconstruction. A group with shoulder exercises with limited range of motion (ROM) at 90 degrees up to a month after surgery and a group with limited ROM only up to 15 days after surgery. Specific objectives: to evaluate shoulder ROM and pain one week before the surgery on average, and 07, 15, 30, 60, 90 and 180 days after surgery; assess motor function one week before the surgery on average, and 30 and 90 days after surgery; evaluate dehiscence and seroma 07, 15, 30, 60 and 90 days after surgery; associate incidence of seroma and dehiscence with preoperative risk factors and compare all variables (shoulder ROM, pain, motor function, seroma and dehiscence) between the two groups. Methods: women with breast cancer, who will be submitted to breast surgery (radical or conservative), followed by immediate reconstruction: alloplastic (tissue expander or breast implant) or oncoplastic (breast reduction or contralateral symmetrization) will be included. Patients that will be submitted to bilateral oncology surgery, reconstruction with autologous tissue or breast surgery without reconstruction will not be included. Patients will be recruited just after surgery scheduling and will undergo preoperative evaluation. At this moment, preoperative analysis will be conducted with personal data and medical history. Patients will undergo new assessments 07, 15, 30, 60, 90 and 180 days after surgery. All patients will receive standard physiotherapy treatment for women undergoing breast reconstruction from Physical Therapy Sector. The protocol consists of early exercise, limited to 90° of shoulder ROM, starting the day after the surgery and repeated 7 days after surgery. After 15 days of surgery, the patients will be randomized into two treatment protocols. One group will start to perform exercises with free shoulder ROM. Patients will be told only to limit the movement if they feel pain. The other group will keep shoulder exercises limited to 90° up to 30 days after surgery. At that moment (one month after surgery), they will also be allowed to move the shoulder with no restriction. The evaluation of the presence of dehiscence and seroma will occur by inspection and palpation. Shoulder ROM will be investigated through active goniometry of flexion, extension, adduction, abduction, internal rotation and external rotation. The pain will be assessed with the Verbal Numerical Scale from 0 to10 and upper limb function through the DASH (Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand Questionnaire) questionnaire.
Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women with the majority receiving an endocrine therapy (ET) in the adjuvant setting. ETs dramatically reduce recurrence and improve survival but given the aging population and increased survivorship, there are growing concerns regarding the cognitive effects of ETs since estrogen is neuroprotective. A critical unanswered question is whether there are differences in cognitive decline between the two classes of ETs, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs - tamoxifen) and aromatase inhibitors (letrozole and anastrozole), in older women at greater risk of hormone receptor breast cancer and cognitive decline. Before a large multicentre observational study can be undertaken the investigators are proposing a feasibility study to establish metrics on participation, retention and adherence rates and parameter estimates to inform sample size calculation required to detect cognitive differences between the two ET classes. A convenience sample of chemotherapy-naïve patients, aged 65 and older, with early stage disease, 25 on a SERM and 50 on an aromatase inhibitor, will be assessed cognitively at baseline and after one year.