View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:The goal of this research study is to learn if starting a stress-reduction program before treatment can affect your stress, mood, and physical symptoms during and after treatment for cancer. This is an investigational study. Up to 140 participants will be enrolled in this study. All participants will be recruited at MD Anderson.
Obesity has been linked to an increased risk of developing a number of malignancies, including postmenopausal breast cancer. One of the established risk factors for breast cancer development in post-menopausal women is obesity which has further been linked to breast cancer recurrence and poorer survival in pre- and post-menopausal breast cancer.
Therapeutical hypnosis is proven to be an effective medical support to chemotherapy: it was shown that it can reduce the pain, anxiety, fatigue felt by the patient. Yet, hypnosis requires the presence of an hypnotherapist, which is why auto-hypnosis could be an efficient alternative to handle the side effects of chemotherapy. In this study, colorectal cancer and breast cancer patients are either taught auto-hypnosis or are taken in standard care for their chemotherapy. The life quality score (QLQC30) assessed during and after chemotherapies will determine if auto-hypnosis is a good medical support in chemotherapies' adverse effects management. The proven benefices of auto-hypnosis in the handling of the side effects of chemotherapies could improve the quality of life of cancer affected patients.
This is a Phase 1b, open-label, multicenter study to determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) or Maximum Administered Dose (MAD) of poziotinib when administered with standard dosing of T-DM1 (3.6 mg/kg IV on Day 1 of each 21-day cycle) in women with advanced or metastatic HER2+ breast cancer. The poziotinib dose identified in Part 1 of the study will be used in combination with standard dose of T-DM1 in Part 2 of the study to confirm the poziotinib dose and evaluate the preliminary efficacy of the combination therapy.
This phase II trial studies how well pembrolizumab works in treating participants with cancer that has spread to other places in the body, has come back or has spread to nearby tissues or lymph nodes. Monoclonal antibodies such as, pembrolizumab, may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread.
The purpose of this clinical study is to demonstrate that the Parsortix™ PC1 system enables the capture and harvest of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from the peripheral blood of patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) and not from healthy volunteers (HVs). The study is also designed to demonstrate that the CTCs harvested by the Parsortix PC1 system from MBC patients can be used effectively for different types of evaluations (e.g. cytopathology, FISH, qPCR, RNAseq, etc.). This is an investigational study. The Parsortix PC1 system is not FDA approved and is currently being used for research purposes only.
To assess the safety and efficacy of two forms of Talazoparib therapy (injections subcutaneously Talazoparib and oral form for the treatment in the equivalent therapeutics dose
Given the uncertain benefit in efficacy of adding CDK 4/6 to first rather than second line endocrine treatment, the aim of this project is to evaluate whether the sequence of an aromatase inhibitor plus CDK 4/6 in first line followed by fulvestrant in second line is superior to the sequence of an aromatase inhibitor in first line followed by fulvestrant plus CDK4/6 in second line.
This is A Phase III, randomized, two-armed, patient-outcome assessor-data analyzer blinded, parallel active controlled non-Inferiority clinical trial study to evaluate efficacy and safety of AryoTrust (Aryogen Trastuzumab in comparison to Herceptin® (Genentech/Roche) in patients with Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Positive breast cancer. The main objective is to verify the non-inferiority of AryoTrust (Aryogen trastuzumab) vs. Herceptin® (Genentech/Roche trastuzumab), both given concomitantly with docetaxel after doxorubicin plus cyclophosphamide in the neoadjuvant setting according to pathological complete response (pCR) as primary objective and objective response (cOR), clinical complete response (cCR), clinical partial response (cPR), clinical stable disease (cSD), clinical progressive disease (cPD), breast conservation rate as Secondary objectives of this study. Evaluating the safety and immunogenicity of AryoTrust vs. Herceptin®, are also the other secondary outcomes. This study has two arms and 108 subjects will participate with a 1:1 allocation and receive mentioned treatment randomly.
This study is designed to find out how engaging in regular exercise (or not) alters the biology of breast tumors as well as the normal tissue (if available) surrounding the tumor. The investigators hope that findings from this initial study will guide the design of future studies to examine how changes in exercise alter breast tumor biology.