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NCT ID: NCT01816438 Active, not recruiting - Dysplasia Clinical Trials

A French Non Interventional Multicentric Cohort Study in Patients With Colorectal Dysplasia

Start date: July 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The main purpose is to describe clinical practices nowadays prospectively about patients with a dysplasia diagnosis or another histological lesions. It will be identified colic situation during the initial colonoscopy after dysplasia diagnosis or atypical lesion. Also the frequency and the type of monitoring conducted about these patients(surgical and endoscopic treatments). The main criterion evaluation will be the surgical and endoscopic rates during the time. The treatments offered such as surgical, endoscopic ones or none of them will be followed. Finally, the outcome of these patients: stability, lesion disappearance, surgery or development of cancer with frequencies for each of them and relationships with histological abnormal colorectal lesion will be measured.

NCT ID: NCT01814384 Active, not recruiting - Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Medico-economic Study of Patient Matched Cutting Blocks (Ancillary) MyKnee ® LBS During Knee Arthroplasty GMK ®.

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Total knee arthroplasty represents over 70 000 surgical procedures per year in France, increasing about 10% each year since the early 1990s. Clinical experience shows a strong rate of success on pain relieve and improvement of knee articular function for these patients. Longevity of the implants had been proved to depend on the biomechanical design and implantation techniques, particularly the bone cuts during the surgery. To improve the precision of these cuts, the patient matched cutting blocks developed by Medacta company allows to adapt bone cuts to the patient anatomy improving the reliability of these procedure. A reduction of surgical time and bleeding would be another benefit expected with this type of ancillary. The objective of this study is to demonstrate the advantage of patient matched cutting blocks for total knee arthroplasty on realiability for both clinical and radiological criteria, morbidity reduction during and after the procedure and also a benefit on an economic point of view.

NCT ID: NCT01812369 Active, not recruiting - Bladder Cancer Clinical Trials

Perioperative Chemotherapy for Patients With Locally Advanced Bladder Cancer

VESPER
Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Radical cystectomy remains the gold standard treatment for invasive non metastatic transitional cell cancer (TCC) of the bladder. In contemporary series, specific survival rates are about 60 to 65% at 5 years, decreasing for locally advanced disease to 45-50% in patients with nonorgan-confined lymph-node negative tumours and to 30-35% in patients with lymph node positive tumours. Perioperative chemotherapy (adjuvant ou neoadjuvant) has been developed in order to improve these results. Thanks to randomized trials and meta-analysis, it can be concluded that perioperative chemotherapy increases overall survival with an absolute benefit of 5%, equating to a survival rate of 50% at 5 years for nonorgan-confined tumours. However, the chemotherapy administration time and the optimal chemotherapy regimen to be delivered are not yet determined. Meta-analyses have shown that the benefit is only observed for chemotherapy regimens including cisplatin. In daily management 4 to 6 cycles of gemcitabine and cisplatin are delivered since this combination has been shown to yield a similar efficacy with a better tolerance as compared to the MVAC regimen (methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin and cisplatin) in the metastatic setting. As HD-MVAC has been shown to be associated with higher response rates than MVAC in bladder metastatic disease, also a better efficacy of HD-MVAC can be suspected in the perioperative setting. Investigators therefore designed a randomized phase III study to compare the efficacy of GC and HD-MVAC in term of progression-free survival in patients for whom chemotherapy has been decided, before or after radical cystectomy. Secondary endpoints include overall survival, side effects, response rate in the neoadjuvant setting and ancillary studies focusing on gemcitabine and cisplatin sensitivity. The total number of patients projected is 500. The number of patients is based on the median progression-free survival rate of 50% at 3 years observed in patients treated with GC (standard arm A) in the perioperative setting. An absolute improvement of 10% (HR=0.74) is expected with HD-MVAC (experimental arm B) with a=0.05 and b=0.20. An interim analysis is planned after the occurrence of 174 events. With an estimated uniform accrual rate of 140 patients per year for 3.5 years and exponential survival, the final analysis is expected to occur 8 years after the start of the trial.

NCT ID: NCT01811121 Active, not recruiting - Glioblastoma Clinical Trials

MEDICO-ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF SURGERY GUIDED BY FLUORESCENCE FOR THE OPTIMIZATION OF RESECTION OF GLIOBLASTOMAS

RESECT
Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Glioblastoma is the most frequent primary malignant brain tumor in adults (3,000 new cases per year) and is characterized by a poor prognosis (median survival 12 months). Treatment is based mainly on surgical excision as complete as possible followed by an additional radiochemotherapy. The prognosis depends mainly on the quality of resection when it is macroscopically complete. Different techniques to support the surgical resection have been developed over the past 20 years. The reference technique is currently the intraoperative neuronavigation for guiding excision by matching the intraoperative tumor boundaries with those of the preoperative MRI. Its main drawback is the loss of precision during the resection related to changes in anatomical limits of the tumor. The per-operative fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) is an innovative alternative technique to support the surgical resection. The 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA), a molecule absorbed by the patient before surgery is captured specifically by the tumor cells and transformed into a fluorochrome revealed intraoperatively by a light source length adapted wave with a set of lenses included in the microscope. Resection is thus guided by this fluorescence whose disappearance translates complete tumor resection. Its interest is twofold: - Increase the percentage of complete tumor resection. - Improve disease-free survival and overall survival. The objective of the study is to compare the FGS to the intraoperative neuronavigation for the resection of glioblastoma, on a medical and economical level through a randomized, prospective, multicenter trial. The annual number of patients likely to benefit of this technique in France is estimated at 2200 new cases.

NCT ID: NCT01808599 Active, not recruiting - MALT Lymphoma Clinical Trials

Phase II Study of Chlorambucil and Subcutaneous Rituximab in Patients With Extranodal MALT Lymphoma

Start date: December 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Single arm phase II study of Chlorambucil in combination with subcutaneous Rituximab followed by maintenance therapy with subcutaneous Rituximab in patients with histologically proven diagnosis of CD20-positive marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of MALT type arisen at any extranodal site, either de novo, or relapsed following local therapy (including surgery, radiotherapy and antibiotics for H. pylori-positive gastric lymphoma).

NCT ID: NCT01805271 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Who Remain Disease-free

Safety Study of Adding Everolimus to Adjuvant Hormone Therapy in Women With High Risk of Relapse, ER+ and HER2- Primary Breast Cancer, Free of Disease After Receiving at Least One Year of Adjuvant Hormone Therapy

Start date: March 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A significant number of patients relapse and eventually die, particularly if they were initially diagnosed with large nodes involvement and/or T3/4 diseases. When analyses focus on patients with ER+/Her2-negative breast cancer, with ≥4N+, 30% had relapsed at 5 years, emphasizing the need for new drugs in this setting (PACS01 data, UNICANCER internal data). Strong evidence suggests that cross-talk between the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway and ER signaling is linked to hormone resistance in breast cancer patients. In the present study, we plan to evaluate the benefit from adding everolimus to standard endocrine treatments after three years of treatment for patient ER+/HER2- at high risk of relapse due to high nodes involvement (≥4) and/or persistent node involvement after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Genomic signatures have emerged during the last 10 years as a new and additive means to evaluate more precisely long term prognosis, and in some instances the amount of benefit from chemotherapy or endocrine therapy in the adjuvant setting. Therefore, the UNIRAD study can be proposed to patients with 1-3 positive lymph nodes at primary surgery and a high risk of relapse with the EndoPredict test. This study is a unique opportunity to prove the efficacy of everolimus in adjuvant setting. The study could be practice changing in case of positive results and could allow improving outcome of breast cancer patients presenting high risk of metastatic relapse.

NCT ID: NCT01804790 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Cancer of the Rectum

Efficacy of Neoadjuvant Folfirinox Regimen in Patients With Resectable Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

Néofirinox
Start date: January 2012
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

National, multi-center, open-label,randomized, 2-arm phase III superiority trial, comparing neoadjuvant chemotherapy (CT) with mFolfirinox followed by preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT), versus preoperative CRT in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer.

NCT ID: NCT01802749 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

Bevacizumab Beyond Progression in Platinum Sensitive Ovarian Cancer

MITO16MANGO2b
Start date: November 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Bevacizumab has been found to prolong progression free survival in first line, and more recently, in second line treatment for platinum sensitive ovarian cancer patients who had not received prior treatment with bevacizumab. Recently reported data suggest that patients with colon cancer who receive bevacizumab in more than one line of therapy (beyond progression) have better results. In ovarian cancer, the role of bevacizumab administered in both first and second-line therapies needs to be defined. This study aims to evaluate whether administering bevacizumab in combination with chemotherapy in second-line therapy to patients with recurrent ovarian cancer who have received first-line bevacizumab will be more effective than chemotherapy alone.

NCT ID: NCT01801709 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Metachromatic Leukodystrophy

Intracerebral Gene Therapy for Children With Early Onset Forms of Metachromatic Leukodystrophy

TG-MLD
Start date: June 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this open-label, single arm, monocentric, phase I/II clinical study is to assess safety and efficacy of ARSA gene transfer in the brain of children affected with early onset forms of Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD). For this purpose, an adeno-associated virus serotype rh.10 (AAVrh.10) vector will be used to transfer the ARSA cDNA coding for Arylsulfatase A (ARSA) enzyme into the brain of children. Five patients with early onset form of MLD, age ranging from 6 months to 4 years, will be included in this protocol and will be followed during 24 months. Patients will be selected at presymptomatic or early stage of their disease, following clinical, neuropsychological and brain imaging criteria. Twelve simultaneous injections of the investigational medicinal product will be performed in the white matter of both brain hemispheres, through 6 image-guided tracks, with 2 deposits per track. A low dose (1x10EXP12 vg total) will be administered to the first 2 patients, while the last 3 will receive a higher dose (4x10EXP12 vg total). Safety and efficiency will be evaluated based on clinical, neuropsychological, radiological, electrophysiological and biological parameters.

NCT ID: NCT01796886 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Brain-damaged Patients

Performance Evaluation of Pupillary Reactivity in Monitoring of Brain-damaged Patients in Intensive Care

Start date: February 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The pupillary examination is a major component of the clinical examination and monitoring of brain-damaged patients in intensive care. The occurrence of abnormal size or pupillary reactivity is a prognostic factor of poor neurological outcome or an indicator of the neurological status degradation. To date, the monitoring of the pupils is clinical. The subjectivity of this measure and, the lack of reproducibility and definition of the abnormality remain as many obstacles to the development of a monitoring of early neurological deterioration. The recent development in pupillometer electronics allows the assessment of responsiveness to a calibrated light stimulus. It offers a reliable and reproducible measure of the pupil diameter. The pupillometers were funded by the association of " Gueules Cassées ". This study aims to establish a relationship between an abnormal pupillary reactivity detection by the electronic pupillometer and a deterioration in neurological status of the patient brain-damaged in the intensive-care unit (ICU). This is considered clinically relevant and has been defined by a lower Glasgow Coma Score of at least 2 points for 2 hours or involving a therapeutic action. If this relationship is demonstrated, the temporal relationship between data pupillometry and the patient's neurological status remain to be established more precisely. This is particularly relevant in neurosurgical context and aim to define the status of the electronic pupillometer in intensive care but also in emergency rooms services, the neurovascular units or in the pre-hospital care. Therefore the investigators will compare the pupillometry data in two patients groups, defined accordingly to the appearance or absence of neurological aggravation in the first 5 days of treatment in intensive care, time-frame defined as the maximum risk period in patients with brain damage. The primary endpoint is represented by the estimated area under the ROC curve corresponding to the last measure of the change in pupil size before the onset of neurological deterioration and worse for the fifth day for non-aggravated. Thus the investigators propose to conduct a prospective trial, aiming to record the diagnostic value of pupillary reactivity by the electronic pupillometer in the monitoring of the neurological aggravation of brain damaged patient in ICU. The duration of the follow-up for a subject does not exceed 5 days. The statistical analysis requires the recruitment of 90 patients, which sets the length of the inclusions to 14 months.