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Cancer clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02782871 Withdrawn - Cancer Clinical Trials

RCT: Compare - Pneupac VR1 to Manual Ventilation in Intubated Patients

Start date: June 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Following major head and neck surgery it may be necessary to keep patients intubated and ventilated for at least 12 hours to allow the swelling associated with the operation to subside. Therefore patients (participants) are transferred to the intensive care unit anaesthetised, in-tubated and ventilated. Current practice is that patients are manually ventilated, by hand, during transfer from the operating theatre to the intensive care unit.

NCT ID: NCT02780375 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Feasibility Study Testing Transcriptional Responses as an Indicator of Individualised Responses to Radiation Effects

RTGene
Start date: September 12, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Peripheral blood samples will be taken with informed consent from radiotherapy patients undergoing standard radiotherapy at The Royal Marsden before and during treatment for breast, lung, gastrointestinal and genitourinary tumours. Responses from panels of up to 800 coding and non-coding RNAs will be assessed in the samples using the nCounter system. Candidate genes identified by Public Health England, Columbia University and/or in the literature as being specific to radiation responses will be included, together with genes relevant to systemic inflammatory responses, to identify transcriptional responses for a range of doses and exposures on an inter-individual basis. Data will be analysed using existing and new statistical tools focused on count data modelling. The intended outcome is identification of a radiation specific panel of genes to inform individual radiation responses and if the results are favourable, a large scale follow up to this proposed pilot is expected in due course.

NCT ID: NCT02780128 Terminated - Cancer Clinical Trials

Next Generation Personalized Neuroblastoma Therapy

NEPENTHE
Start date: July 2016
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research study is to match genomic aberrations in tumor cells at time of relapse to rationally designed combinations of molecularly targeted agents. This study will be done in two parts: Part I: Tumor will be accessed at study entry via a biopsy and subjected to deep sequencing to identify protocol-specified biomarkers for therapy assignment. Part II: If the tumor contains a genetic change defined by the study as being actionable, and other criteria are met, participants will be assigned to therapy based upon the genetic changes identified in the tumor biopsy.

NCT ID: NCT02779725 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

SymptomCare@Home: Deconstructing an Effective Symptom Management Intervention

SCH
Start date: August 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will determine the most important and cost effective components of SymptomCare@Home, a new approach to cancer chemotherapy symptom care that has been shown to reduce problematic symptoms through automated daily monitoring, self-management coaching, and oncology team follow-up care using decisional support for patients at home when their symptoms are most likely at their worse. Once the key parts of the intervention and its cost effectiveness are known, it can be moved into everyday cancer care.

NCT ID: NCT02777788 Active, not recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

Curative Study of Chinese Traditional Medicine to Treat Lung Cancer

TCM
Start date: September 2014
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to observe the efficacy of chemotherapy combined with Chinese patent drugs for patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer, also to evaluate the adverse reaction and the reliability.

NCT ID: NCT02777697 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Cancer Chronic Pain Predicted by Emotional and Cognitive Status

CanoPEe
Start date: March 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of this study is to investigate the predictive dimension of cognitive-emotional status of cancer patients on the chronic pain development 6 months after different cancer treatment protocol (surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy ...).

NCT ID: NCT02777060 Recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Exploring the Effectiveness of Sensor-based Balance Training on Patient Outcome Measures

Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Explore the benefit of the game-based virtual reality system in improving lower extremity kinematics and balance in patients suffering from disease/disorders including Diabetes, Cancer, Multiple Sclerosis, Arthritis, Parkinson's disease, Cognitive Disorders, Brain Injury, Stroke or Frailty. A four to six weeks of training with 2 training session/week will be provided.

NCT ID: NCT02775825 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Quality of the End of Life Care

Start date: October 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

End-of life care is one of the principle components of cancer care. Measurement of the quality of care provided for end-of-life cancer patients is an important issue. Recently there has been an increased emphasis on measuring and monitoring the quality of cancer care for the purpose of improving clinical practice. Despite increasing attention paid to end-of-life care in recent years, many studies have described difficulties in the final phase of life, including problems with access to hospice, inadequate symptom management, care giving burdens, care mismatched with patient preferences, and inappropriate resource use. Measuring quality of life is an important issue for monitoring clinical practice and improving outcome. Although patient assessment is the best quality measure, it is impractical to measure the quality of end-of-life care because of the difficulties of accurate prognostication for end-of-life and many patients are too ill to provide assessments. In contrast, several recent studies developed quality indicators (QIs) of palliative and end-of-life care, which assess the quality from existing sources such as administrative data or medical chart data.

NCT ID: NCT02773329 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Using Game-based Exercise to Improve Balance in Cancer Patients

Start date: May 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Cancer patients with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) have deficits in sensory and motor skills leading to inappropriate proprioceptive feedback, impaired postural control and high fall risk. This study will investigate the acceptability and effect of an interactive motor adaptation balance training program based on wearable sensors for improving balance in older cancer patients with CIPN. Cancer patients with confirmed CIPN will be recruited and will be randomized to either intervention (IG) or control (CG) group and followed for 6 months. The intervention group will take part in a 6-week balance training program twice per week in either their home or in clinic (based on subject preference) under the supervision of a qualified research staff member. This intervention includes interactive game-based balance training including repetitive weight shifting and virtual obstacle crossing tasks. Wearable sensors will provide real-time visual/auditory feedback from foot and ankle position and allowed perception of motor-errors during each motor-action. The control group will be instructed to complete a supervised foot and ankle exercise without using sensor technology. Changes in balance, gait, and physical activity, and number of falls will be compared pre- and post-intervention, as well as 3 and 6 month post intervention. Investigators hypothesize that patients receiving sensor-based exercise training will benefit more compared to group receiving conventional non-technology home-based training in terms of improving functional performance and reducing falls.

NCT ID: NCT02771028 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Emotional Freedom Techniques to Reduce Patient Reported Cognitive Complaints in Cancer Survivors

EMOTICON
Start date: October 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to further validate the CDT as a screening tool for identifying elderly cancer patients in need of a more in-depth cognitive evaluation within comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) and to validate the pre-defined cut-off score of ≤ 4 according to the Freund scoring system. All geriatric patients that are diagnosed with cancer will be screened by the oncology clinical nurse specialists attached to the respective multi-disciplinary clinics with the VES-13 and G8 questionnaire. Patients that screen positive, will be offered referral to the multi-disciplinary onco-geriatric program where a member of the research team will implement a full geriatric evaluation under supervision of the medical oncologist and/or geriatrician who will then formulate recommendations and might suggest referral to other health care providers. Individual results and survival data of all the patients that have given their informed consent will be registered in a database.