View clinical trials related to Cancer.
Filter by:Cancer and cancer treatments are accompanied by several possible side effects, such as nausea, hot flashes, fatigue, drowsiness, etc. Complementary and integrative therapies, such as acupuncture, could be used to manage these symptoms. The aim of this study for our research team is to have an idea of the interest of cancer patients and caregivers in acupuncture. This is a prospective, interventional study. Cancer patients and caregivers will be approached at the day care clinic by a health care worker to participate in this study. They will be asked to complete a questionnaire about their interest in acupuncture and their motivation, what symptoms they would need it for, where they would like this acupuncture to take place, whether they are willing to pay for it, and whether they would be interested in an information session about acupuncture.
Sample: The sample will be 298 ethnically diverse (30% Hispanic) survivors who have a new diagnosis or localized recurrence of solid tumor cancer and elevated depression or anxiety and their informal caregivers. Design: The investigators selected the SMART design for this study over alternative designs (e.g.,implementation designs) because the SMART design allows a precision or personalized approach to determine the right treatment at the right dose with the right sequence for the right survivor-caregiver dyad. SMART designs, although newer, show promise in developing the sequences of evidence-based interventions for more efficient and individualized patient- and caregiver-centered care. The investigators will use findings from this study to create an algorithm for clinically meaningful decision making about symptom management for survivors and their caregivers to be tested in future implementation/dissemination studies. The dyad (survivor-caregiver) will be randomly assigned to either: 1) Symptom Management and Survivorship Guideline (Handbook) alone or 2) Telephone Interpersonal Counseling (TIP-C) +Handbook for 8 weeks followed by continued Handbook alone for 4 weeks. During 12 weeks following initial randomization, all participants will receive weekly telephone contacts to assess symptoms, deliver the assigned intervention and assess its enactment and fidelity. After the initial 4 weeks in the Handbook alone group, the survivor's response to the intervention will be determined. If the survivor responds (defined as a reduced score on depression and/or anxiety), the dyad will continue with the Handbook alone for 8 more weeks. If the survivor is a non-responder (defined as no improvement or a worsening score for depression and/or anxiety), the dyad will be re-randomized to either continue with Handbook alone for 8 more weeks, or add 8 weeks of TIP-C. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, weeks 13 and 17 for both members of the dyad.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether CPC634 (CriPec® docetaxel) is effective in the treatment of patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer who are resistant to prior platinum-based chemotherapy .
Studies have shown that tumors from the same patient may respond very differently to the same therapeutic agents. This study aims to investigate the genetic basis of tumors that respond abnormally well or poorly to therapeutic agents in an effort to understand the fundamental genetic basis of this response. The present protocol seeks to retrospectively perform Exome, next-generation (DNA) sequencing and/or other molecular techniques on tumor samples to identify the genetic basis of a patient's exceptional response to chemotherapy.
This is a 2 strata pilot trial within the Pacific Pediatric Neuro-Oncology Consortium (PNOC). The study will use a new treatment approach based on each patient's tumor gene expression, whole-exome sequencing (WES), targeted panel profile (UCSF 500 gene panel), and RNA-Seq. The current study will test the efficacy of such an approach in children with High-grade gliomas HGG.
Rising costs and poor patient experiences from under-treated symptoms have led to the demand for approaches that improve patients' experiences and lower expenditures. This observational project assigned a lay health worker to concuct proactive symptom assessments intended to achieve these goals among patients with advanced cancer.
This is a first in human study to identify whether FP-1305 is suitable to use in humans. The previous pre-clinical studies have demonstrated that FP-1305 binds to a receptor known as CLEVER-1. CLEVER-1 has been shown to support tumour growth. No significant adverse events were witnessed in primates and the dose used will be 300 fold lower than the dose provided to primates which showed no toxicity. The patients with advanced melanoma, uveal melanoma, cholangiocarcinoma, gallbladder cancer, ER+ breast, gastric, ovarian, pancreatic, colorectal, liver or anaplastic thyroid cancer who have exhausted all licenced therapeutic options will die due to their disease. Based on the investigator's existing data CLEVER-1 is expressed in these tumour types. Inhibition of CLEVER-1 with FP-1305 may have an anti-tumour effect in these patients.
The purpose of PERMIT is to collect information on the treatment of radiotherapy patients using a new radiotherapy machine that includes magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging (MR linac) to guide treatment. The aim is to use this information to support the introduction of MR Linac into clinical practice. PERMIT will collect details on patients treated on the MR linac plus details on their side effects and other outcomes. This information plus technical and imaging information will be combined with information from other centres using this machine. By doing so this will help us learn how best to use the MR Linac in the future and design new radiotherapy protocols
This is a prospective trial for a computation-based efficacy prediction method for anticancer target therapies. The original computational algorithm utilizes individual transcriptome data of a cancer sample and assesses changes at the level of gene expression and intracellular signaling pathways. By applying the database of known molecular targets of anticancer target drugs it allows to rank potential efficacies of target drugs.
Investigators deconstructed the port that removed from patients and identified there were structural weakness, old blood clot and fibrin deposits. Investigators consider the problem may be exist in maintenance. After thoroughly examination the maintenance protocol, Investigators identified the problem and try to remodel the maintenance protocol. The Goal of this study was to testify the clinical value of standard maintenance protocol.