View clinical trials related to Cancer.
Filter by:The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the quality of the clinical trial experience of cancer patients participating in cancer research studies through Summa Health System Hospitals Cancer Research Program by evaluating patient satisfaction regarding reasons for participating, facility, consent and treatment, personal issues and overall assessment. The secondary objective of this study is to determine areas for improvement to make the patient's clinical trial experience a satisfying and positive journey.
SMOKN5 is aimed at studying ways to reduce environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) for children who are being treated for cancer. The study includes St. Jude parents whose child lives with at least one adult smoker who exposes the child to ETS, also called "secondhand smoke." We are comparing two groups of parents to see which group results in lower ETS exposure levels for the child being treated with cancer. The first group will receive the standard information and advice usually given to parents about secondhand smoke. The second group will take part in a new program designed to reduce ETS. The primary objective of the study is to determine the efficacy of an environmental tobacco smoke intervention compared to the standard care control condition, as measured by parent report. Parents in each group answer questions about ETS exposure. We also collect urine samples from the child at specific time points throughout the study. The urine is tested to measure the amount of cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine. Measuring cotinine tells us how much nicotine from tobacco smoke the child has been exposed to. Children who are at least 10 years of age or older will also be asked to complete a set of questions pertaining to their tobacco use history and ETS exposure from others. This will occur at the same five time points in which the parent completes his/her portion. The study will last about 12 months for each participating family. Parents who take part in the study may learn how to lower their child's exposure to ETS, and this may, in turn, lower the child's chances of having ETS-related health problems.
This is an open label, Phase II, multi-center study designed to evaluate the effect of AVR118 when administered to patients with systemic symptoms related to recurrent or metastatic cancers who may or may not be undergoing anti-cancer treatment. During the initial, induction treatment phase of the study, AVR118, 4.0 mL, will be given subcutaneously each day for 28 days. Patients who respond to the trial period dosing will be eligible to continue on AVR118 if they and their physicians believe it would be beneficial, and if no safety concerns are raised.
Childhood cancer predisposes to health risks that may not become apparent until many years after completion of therapy. The SJLIFE protocol is designed to establish a lifetime cohort of childhood cancer survivors treated at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital to facilitate evaluation of health outcomes in aging adults surviving pediatric cancer. The study focuses on the following Primary and secondary objectives: - To establish a lifetime cohort of childhood cancer survivors treated at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital to facilitate evaluation of health outcomes in aging children and adults surviving pediatric cancer. - To estimate the prevalence, cumulative incidence, and latency of selected late treatment complications following predisposing therapeutic exposures in children and adults surviving pediatric cancer. - To identify treatment, genetic, demographic, and psychosocial / behavioral related predictors of adverse health outcomes. - To develop risk profiles for adverse health outcomes across the age spectrum to guide development of clinical screening guidelines and risk-reducing interventions. - To identify factors that may be protective against the development of specific late treatment complications. - To generate data for a series of future hypothesis-driven trials - To serve as a source for the collection of samples from child and adult volunteers for future SJLIFE research. - To collect health outcomes data on a community control population for comparison purposes.
The main aim of this study is to evaluate whether a patient education programme on cancer pain management compared to standard care decreases pain and increases patients quality of life. The investigators hypothesis is that patients and family caregivers who receive the intervention will have improved outcomes. Patients and family members are seen in their homes by the nurses doing the intervention over 6 weeks. Patients keep a diary of their pain and medication intake.
Fasting (refraining from eating and drinking) during the day is safe while receiving chemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of XL147 in combination with paclitaxel and carboplatin in adults with solid tumors. XL147 is a new chemical entity that inhibits PI3 Kinase. Inactivation of PI3K has been shown to inhibit growth and induce apoptosis (programmed cell death) in tumor cells. In clinical practice, the combination of paclitaxel and carboplatin is an accepted treatment regimen for various solid tumors, including ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
The investigators have determined that the drug amantadine hydrochloride is metabolized by acetylation by a specific enzyme named spermidine/spermine N-acetyltransferase (SSAT). This enzyme is increased in cancer cells. The investigators hypothesized that the amount of N-acetylamantadine excreted in urine during the first 12 hours after an oral dose would serve as a diagnostic biomarker for the presence of cancer in a human test subject.
This study will assess the effect of IT-101 on delaying cancer progression in patients with platinum sensitive ovarian cancer.
The primary objective of the trial is to determine the efficacy of VANDETANIB monotherapy or VANDETANIB plus GEMCITABINE or PLACEBO plus GEMCITABINE in prolonging the progression-free survival (PFS) at the trial closure in patients with advanced (unresectable or metastatic) biliary tract cancer.