View clinical trials related to Breast Neoplasms.
Filter by:To compare safety of adjuvant OFS combined with anastrozole versus OFS combined with exemestane in Chinese premenopausal hormonal receptor(HR) positive breast cancer patients.
This subproject is included in a project coordinated between program groups Evaluation of Health Services of Epidemiology and Public Health (Project CAMISS). The overall objective is to evaluate different aspects of health care received by patients with breast cancer from the diagnostic process, treatment, complications, survival and quality of life, to provide information to improve the effectiveness of interventions, reduce variability, have best predictive rules and increase the quality of life. The main objective of the subproject is to create and validate prospectively predictive rules of recurrence, complications, mortality, changes in quality of life in these patients at admission and one/two years of treatment and to evaluate the external validity of our rules to predict relapses, complications and mortality in the retrospective sample of patients participating in screening programs. Observational methodology with information available from a retrospective cohort of women diagnosed between 2000 and 2009 and another 2-year prospective follow-up included 2040 incident cases of breast cancer in 18 hospitals of 5 regions. Cohorts will learn clinical and health care diagnosis, tumor, treatment, hospital, follow-up (complications, relapse, and vital status) cost and quality of life. Prediction rules are created by means of regression/Cox models at the prospective sample and also investigators will assess the external validity in the retrospective cohort in the case of recurrence, complications and mortality. Expected results: There are currently no results of cohort analysis of the diagnostic process of care that integrates different aspects. The study will create tools to assist prognostic and therapeutic decision making process in these patients
For most breast cancer patients, surgery is the primary treatment. When patients undergo a lumpectomy, it is difficult for the surgeon to determine the extent of the tumor which results in incomplete tumor removal as determined by a positive margin assessment several days after the initial surgery is completed. Most patients with positive margins will undergo a second or even a third surgery to complete the tumor removal. The investigators hypothesize that the LUM Imaging System can reduce the rates of positive margins and, thus, the rates of second surgeries by identifying microscopic residual cancer in the tumor bed. This is a non-randomized, open label study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of an intraoperative imaging system, the LUM Imaging System (LUM015 in conjunction with LUM 2.6 Imaging Device), in identifying residual cancer in the tumor bed of female breast cancer subjects. The study is composed of a Feasibility Trial divided into two phases: Phase A (15 total subjects) and Phase B (up to 50 total subjects). During Phase A, 15 subjects will be evaluated to collect additional patient safety data, select the dose of LUM015 for Phase B and evaluate the device function. During Phase B, subjects will be injected with LUM015 at the dose determined during Phase A to preliminarily assess the performance of the detection algorithm against pathology margin assessment. In Phase B, the surgeon will perform standard of care surgery and then use the LUM Imaging System to guide the removal of additional cavity shavings as indicated by the LUM Imaging System.
To determine whether treatment with alpelisib plus fulvestrant prolongs progression-free survival compared to fulvestrant and placebo in men and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor positive (HR+), HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, who received prior treatment with an Aromatase Inhibitor either as (neo)adjuvant or for advanced disease.
The purpose of this phase II is to study the efficacy and toxicity of carboplatin and paclitaxel with pertuzumab and trastuzumab in HER2 positive and carboplatin and paclitaxel with bevacizumab in HER2 negative in the neoadjuvant setting for the treatment of breast cancer.
To determine whether MCS110 antibody therapy improves the efficacy of carboplatin and gemcitabine (carbo/gem) in advanced TNBC patients
This multicenter randomized (1:1) phase 2 study is designed to assess the efficacy of the Walk with Ease exercise program on improving fatigue after adjuvant radiotherapy compared to usual care in 50 women with stage 0-3 breast cancer who have undergone breast surgery. Prior to initiation of radiation, during the last week, and 4-6 weeks post radiation, women in both arms will complete a number of surveys including questionnaires on fatigue, pain, depression, sleep, and social support. In addition, a blood sample will be collected prior to, during the last week of radiation, and 4-6 weeks post radiation to explore measures of inflammatory biomarkers, and their potential association with exercise and fatigue.
Purpose of the study is to examine the effects of 3 months of physical activity intervention on myocardial function (Left ventricular ejection fraction) in patients with HER2+ breast cancer
This phase I trial studies the side effects of vaccine therapy and pembrolizumab in treating patients with solid tumors that have spread to other places in the body and usually cannot be cured or controlled with treatment, that have failed prior therapy, and that cannot be removed by surgery. Vaccines made from a gene-modified virus may help the body build an effective immune response to kill tumor cells. Monoclonal antibodies, such as pembrolizumab, may block tumor growth in different ways by targeting certain cells. Giving vaccine therapy together with pembrolizumab may be a better treatment in patients with solid tumors.
This pilot clinical trial studies a pancreatic nutritional program for helping patients with stage I-III breast cancer who are overweight or obese lose weight. When patients have a high level of sugar in their blood, due to eating sugary foods and/or a sedentary lifestyle, the pancreas needs to work harder to digest the sugar. This can cause weight gain, obesity, and other illnesses. Breast cancer patients who are overweight and obese are more likely to have their breast cancer return. The pancreatic nutritional program is a diet and lifestyle intervention that helps protect the pancreas by keeping blood sugar levels low, and may help patients achieve sustained weight loss, improved health, better quality of life, and possibly a better outcome to their treatment.