View clinical trials related to Cancer.
Filter by:BLOOD is an investigator-initiated, multicenter, prospective biomarker study in patients with advanced melanoma treated with anti-PD-1 monotherapy in the first-line setting. The "studied products" will be administered and managed within routine medical care in Belgium. The overall goal is (i) to investigate biomarkers for anti-PD-1 monotherapy and (ii) to gather evidence on real-life use of anti-PD-1 monotherapy in melanoma.
The purpose of this study is to test a nurse-led intervention for adults with newly diagnosed cancer and undiagnosed/newly diagnosed Type-2 diabetes
Semi-structured qualitative interviews will be conducted to understand key factors that would enable / facilitate patients with chronic breathlessness to potentially use an online breathlessness intervention (SELF-BREATHE).
The aim of this study is to provide darolutamide treatment to patients who participated in a previous study with darolutamide supported by Bayer and the treating doctor considers that the continuation of the treatment with darolutamide to be beneficial. Patients will be carried over from the previous studies and continue in this study with darolutamide treatment on the same dosage. They will also return to the study centers for doctor's visits as often as they did in the previous study.
Undertreated patient symptoms and resulting acute care use require approaches that improve symptom-burden. Previously a lay health worker (LHW)-led symptom screening intervention was developed for patients with cancer. In pilot work, the intervention was associated with improvements in patient symptom burden and reductions in healthcare use and costs of care at the end of life. This intervention will be expanded across several clinics to evaluate the impact of the LHW intervention on with cancer and the LHW will be trained to refer patients to palliative care. This randomized intervention will evaluate the effect on healthcare use, total costs, palliative care and hospice referral.
To determine whether an Internet-based pain coping skills program plus enhanced usual care, compared to enhanced usual care alone, yields significant improvements in the co-primary outcomes of pain severity (as measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI)) and pain interference (also measured by the BPI) from baseline to the post-intervention assessment for cancer survivors with persistent pain.
The purpose of this study is to explain the provision of palliative care at the end of life by the implementation of the ELNEC course, as WBT Program using the Normalization Process Theory, that focus attention on how complex interventions become routinely embedded in practice. In addition to, identify the changes implemented by the participant nurses (intervention group) in their clinical practice, after participating in WBT Program to provide Palliative Care alongside with usual care versus usual care only (control group) for children with life-limiting conditions or in the case of accidents/sudden death, at the end of life. And finally, provide findings that will assist in the interpretation of the trial results.
The primary objective of this study is to describe the administration practices of the antalgic Ketamine in French CLCC (Centre de Lutte Contre le Cancer) in terms of indication (neuropathic sequelae pains, morphine additional effect or morphine withdrawal, intensity, localisation…) and administration protocol (route, posology, duration, administration sequence, premedication). The secondary objectives are to evaluate in the context of cancer, the analgesic efficacy, the tolerance profile (biological and clinical toxicities) and the quality of life, including anxiety and depression. In addition, the described parameters will be evaluated as safety and efficacy predictive factors of the Ketamine in oncology.
Off-label drug use, where a marketed drug is used outside its approved indication, may allow early access to new and promising treatments. However, its use can be a source of controversy, due to limited evidence for clinical benefit and lack of cost/QALY-estimates, leading to challenging prioritization issues. The number of drugs suitable for off-label use is expected to further increase in the coming years, owing to the rapid progress in the field of oncology, in particular with the current era of precision medicine and targeted therapies. This also challenges the traditional method of running clinical trials, with eligible patient populations commonly being small, underpinning the importance of gaining supplementary real-world evidence from well performed observational studies. This prospective observational study will therefore assess real-world outcomes of patients treated with off-label anti-cancer drugs, including efficacy in terms of response rates, time to progression/relapse measures and survival; patient-reported outcome measures (PROMS) and self-reported side-effects/toxicity; as well as collecting blood samples for a biobank for further translational research. Further, the study will give a descriptive analysis of the current practice of off-label use of anti-cancer drugs in Norway, including prevalence estimation and health care related cost analyses.
The goal of this study is to adapt an evidence-based sedentary behavior reduction intervention for men and women living in Alabama and determine its feasibility, acceptance, and limited efficacy.