View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is a single-arm, open-label study testing the effects of neoadjuvant therapy with the aromatase inhibitor letrozole in post-menopausal women with Stage I-III ER+, HER2- breast cancer. Eligible subjects will be treated with letrozole therapy for 4 to 24 weeks prior to surgical resection of the tumor. Tumor specimens obtained at baseline (diagnostic biopsy) and at surgery (surgical specimen) will be compared using molecular analyses. A subset of subjects will be asked to provide an optional research tumor biopsy prior to treatment for molecular analysis. Subjects will be evaluated for treatment adherence and provide feedback via survey questionnaires to identify potential causes of non-adherence.
A randomized, Phase II trial of circulating tumor DNA-guided second line Adjuvant therapy for high Residual risk, stage II-III, Estrogen Receptor positive, HER-2 negative breast cancer (DARE)
This retrospective observational study will collect Canadian real-world data (RWD) from HER2+ metastatic breast cancer (mBC) patients to describe treatment sequences of all therapies received in the metastatic setting, to measure overall survival (OS), progression free survival (PFS), time to next active anti-cancer therapy, and to estimate the health resources utilization (HRU) during third-line therapy.
Patients with breast cancer, who have completed first line therapy (e.g., radiotherapy, chemotherapy, surgery), and who have to be identified with having a high risk of recurrence of cancer, will be eligible for the study. This patient group is currently offered a standard of care chemotherapy plus endocrine therapy (ET). The study investigates whether the patient group with high-risk early breast cancer benefits from treatment with the medication abemaciclib in combination with ET compared to ET alone.
Women with Hormone Receptor (HR)+ Human Epidermal growth factor Receptor (HER)2- metastatic breast cancer are eligible to a randomized trial. Patients receiving standard first line therapy for metastatic HR+ Breast cancer(BC) (letrozole+palbociclib) are randomly assigned to also receive Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy(SBRT) to each metastatic lesion.
Aim 1: This pilot study tests the feasibility and acceptability of a mobile app-based behavioral intervention in 40 women receiving chemotherapy for breast cancer. Participants will be randomized to receive app components following a 2x2 factorial design. Feasibility will be assessed by participant recruitment yield, intervention adherence, contamination, and retention. Acceptability will be assessed by participant ratings and perceptions of intervention components as measured at post-intervention (1 month post-chemotherapy). Aim 2: Examine preliminary efficacy of the intervention components (i.e., Move, Exercise, Core) delivered alone (i.e., main effects) and in combination (i.e., interaction effects; Move+Exercise) on executive function and working memory at post-intervention. These data will inform the sample size needed for a fully-powered randomized controlled trial. Aim 2 outcomes will be measured at pre-intervention (before the first or second chemotherapy cycle) and post-intervention, and include accelerometry and neurocognitive testing. Exploratory Aim: Explore the effects of the intervention components on correlates of cancer-associated cognitive decline. Exploratory outcomes will be measured at pre- and post-intervention and include patient-reported outcomes, specifically cancer-related fatigue. Participants will also completed brief ecological momentary assessments (EMAs) their mobile phones across four 14-day measurement bursts at pre-intervention, mid-chemotherapy, and 1 month post-chemotherapy to further explore associations among behavioral patterns, cognition, and correlates.
GYNECO-IMM&Co is a prospective clinical and biological cohort ; this study aims to identify immune surveillance and escape mechanisms and also predictive biomarkers for survival patients who suffer from ovarian and breast carcinoma.
The goal of the study is to test the feasibility and acceptability of a supervised, online-delivered, individualized, physical activity program in a sample of post-active treatment breast cancer survivors. The proposed intervention will use a 2-arm randomized controlled trial study design to compare a 12-week resistance-based physical activity program to an attention control (i.e., printed individualized physical activity program) group on feasibility, acceptability and changes in strength as measured by 10 repetition maximum (10RM). Both groups will wear accelerometers. The main hypothesis is that participants randomized to the intervention arm will rate the online-delivered physical activity program as feasible and acceptable compared to attention control participants. The overall rationale is that delivering a physical activity intervention online may increase uptake of the intervention, which may lead to maintained physical activity behavior and associated health benefits. The primary outcomes are feasibility as measured by participant retention and acceptability as measured by adherence to physical activity program (recorded by physical activity log). Secondary outcomes include changes in strength as measured by 10RM, objectively measured physical activity levels as measured by the accelerometer, satisfaction, physical functioning and health-related quality of life. Additionally, a select number of participants will be invited for an interview to talk about their experiences in the program, motivation and barriers to exercise. Interview description: Participants will complete one-on-one interviews with the PI or research staff over videoconferencing software (Rutgers Zoom). The interview will be 45 to 60 minutes in duration and audio recorded using the "record meeting" function. Prior to the interview, participants will consent to being audio recorded. The recording will be stored on Box (a HIPAA compliant cloud drive). A transcript of the audio will be generated using the "audio transcript" function on Rutgers Zoom and transcribed by a third party to ensure accuracy.
This study is a Phase I/II, multicenter, first-in-human, open-label dose-escalation study of BT8009 given as a single agent and in combination with pembrolizumab in participants with advanced solid tumors associated with Nectin-4 expression or in participants with advanced solid tumor malignancies having renal insufficiency. The primary endpoints are: Dose limiting toxicities (Parts A-1 and A-2), Overall response rate per RECIST v1.1 (Part B), Safety and tolerability (Part C), and characterization of the pharmacokinetics (Part D).
Patients with pending breast biopsies will have the tumor site's tissue dielectric constant (TDC) measured prior to the biopsy. Similar TDC measurements will be made at a standard breast site on the biopsied breast and on mirrored sites on the non-affected breast.