View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:Determine the acceptability and feasibility of a supportive care software platform to improve quality of life and function in metastatic breast cancer patients. Acceptability will be defined as the proportion of women offered the intervention who agree to participate. Feasibility will be defined as the proportion of women who consent, take a tablet home, who actually interact with the tablet and participate at least one month of the program.
This is a multicenter, interventional, prospective study among breast cancer patients with a suspicion of metastatic meningitis. The current study aims to assess the use of proteomic profile issued from cerebrospinal fluid microvesicles for diagnosis of leptomeningeal metastases.
The investigators aim to evaluate the possibility of clinical application of ctDNA detection in peripheral blood of normal people, benign breast disease patients and breast cancer patients, so as to act as the new techniques or indicators of early screening of breast cancer.
This pilot study examined changes in anthropometric measures as a result of and feasibility/ acceptability of a mindful eating intervention for overweight and obese postmenopausal breast cancer survivors.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer pathology among women worldwide and represents a complex psychological challenge for those affected. Diagnosis and subsequent treatments can have a significant impact not only on the physical well-being of people, but also on their psychological well-being. Tumor-related distress is described as an "unpleasant emotional multifactorial experience of a psychological, social and / or spiritual nature that can interfere with the ability to effectively cope with cancer, physical symptoms and treatment" from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.Studies have shown that from one third to half of breast cancer patients can experience psychological distress. The psychological distress, understood as symptoms of anxiety, depression and stress, is related to a lower quality of life, a lower compliance related to a lower efficacy of the treatments, a higher mortality and a higher risk of suicide, so much so that this discomfort it is recognized as the sixth vital sign in cancer treatment. Both the diagnosis of cancer and the treatments related to the disease, can lead to the alternation of depressive phases and in some cases even to the presence of major depression: it is estimated that the levels of depression reach thresholds that oscillate between 5 and 25% between women suffering from breast cancer. In reference to what are the interventions aimed at reducing depressive symptomatology in patients with breast cancer, in this study we refer in particular to 2 treatments, of which several studies attest to their effectiveness: interventions based on Mindfulness (MBI) and interventions based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is an empirically supported treatment for depression. Numerous studies have shown that CBT is both effective in treating acute depression and preventing subsequent relapses and relapses after the end of active treatment. MBI-based interventions have been widely disseminated both at the clinical and research level as short, cost-effective interventions. Several systematic reviews have shown the effectiveness of MBIs in improving anxiety and depressive symptoms, sleep, fatigue, disease adaptation and stress reduction, with coping and well-being improved in patients with chronic illnesses including also the oncological pathologies. In particular, a meta-analysis of studies conducted on women with breast cancer confirmed the effectiveness of MBI in reducing symptoms of anxiety, depression and stress, suggesting the importance of these treatments in improving the mental health of these women. In addition, studies have shown that the improvements achieved are stable even at long-term follow-up.
This phase II trial studies how well the combination of avelumab with liposomal doxorubicin with or without binimetinib, or the combination of avelumab with sacituzumab govitecan works in treating patients with triple negative breast cancer that is stage IV or is not able to be removed by surgery (unresectable) and has come back (recurrent). Immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors like avelumab require activation of the patient's immune system. This trial includes a two week induction or lead-in of medications that can stimulate the immune system. It is our hope that this induction will improve the response to immunotherapy with avelumab. One treatment, sacituzumab Govitecan, is a monoclonal antibody called sacituzumab linked to a chemotherapy drug called SN-38. Sacituzumab govitecan is a form of targeted therapy because it attaches to specific molecules (receptors) on the surface of tumor cells, known as Tumor-associated calcium signal transducer 2 (TROP2) receptors, and delivers SN-38 to kill them. Another treatment, liposomal doxorubicin, is a form of the anticancer drug doxorubicin that is contained in very tiny, fat-like particles. It may have fewer side effects and work better than doxorubicin, and may enhance factors associated with immune response. The third medication is called binimetinib, which may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth, and may help activate the immune system. It is not yet known whether giving avelumab in combination with liposomal doxorubicin with or without binimetinib, or the combination of avelumab with sacituzumab govitecan will work better in treating patients with triple negative breast cancer.
This is a Phase II single center, open-label, non-randomized study in patients with locally recurrent, inoperable, and/or metastatic inflammatory breast cancer with lymphangitic spread to the chest wall. Patients will be treated with pembrolizumab administered as an intravenous infusion at 200 mg in 21-day treatment cycles and oral cyclophosphamide (CTX) 50 mg per day in metronomic administration as a 21 days cycle Forty-six patients will be required for the study. Key inclusion criteria are PDL1 (≥1%) positive and/or tumor infiltrating lymphocyte positive (≥1%) locally advanced "chest wall" breast cancer (with or without distant metastases), who have been treated with chemotherapy or radiation therapy may be eligible for this study. Patients with cutaneous metastases only (with or without evidence of primary tumor) are eligible for the study. Key exclusion criteria included prior anti PD1 or anti CTLA-4 or other immune pathway-targeted therapy. Patients with autoimmune diseases and/or receiving drugs who interfere with the immune system will not be eligible.
In this study, we compared the survival benefit of breast cancer patients with dyslipidemia (low and medium risk of ASCVD). The control group used dietary intervention instead of statins intervention. The main endpoint was 5 years DFS. The subjects were breast cancer patients.
A unique approach for cancer treatment employing intratumoral diffusing alpha radiation emitter device for newly Diagnosed Breast Carcinoma patients with distant metastases
• Address the accuracy of functional MRI techniques to predict response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy given to local advanced breast cancer patients with correlation with pathology thus allowing early chemotherapy regimen modification to increase number of patients achieving pathological complete response or save patients from toxic effects of ineffective chemotherapy.