There are about 21062 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Italy. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
The purpose of the study is to assess the safety and performance of the Omega™ LAA (Left Atrial Appendage) Occluder and Omega™ Delivery System in LAA (Left Atrial Appendage) closure for patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) and high bleeding risk.
The gold standard of surgical treatment for patients with early breast cancer (BC) is breast conservation and sentinel node biopsy (SNB). Ongoing randomized trials are evaluating to omit surgery at all when axillary imaging is negative. However, the available diagnostic tools still have several limitations in accuracy. Combining the specificity of PET, with the superior sensitivity of MRI, hybrid PET/MRI might be a non-invasive, one-stage, operator-independent imaging method to accurately define nodal status and, whenever negative, might replace surgery for axillary staging. The project includes patients with <3 cm BC without overt nodal involvement who will undergo PET/MRI prior to surgery. The primary aim is to compare the staging power between SNB and PET/MRI in detecting axillary lymph node macrometastases (>2 mm). Additionally, general concordance and diagnostic accuracy of PET/MRI vs SNB, eventual correlation with BC molecular subtypes and MRI findings will be evaluated.
The objective of this single arm, post market, clinical study is to evaluate the performance of Gynecare TVT ABBREVO® Continence System in women undergoing Mid-urethral sling surgery for Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI).
The objective of this post market, clinical registry is to evaluate the performance of the products of the TVT family of products or vaginal vault or uterine prolapse repair (with laparotomic or laparoscopic approach including robotic assisted) using either Gynemesh PS Mesh or Artisyn Mesh in women undergoing surgery for SUI and POP.
Hartmann's procedure was described for the first time in 1921 as an alternative to abdominoperineal resection for the treatment of upper rectal tumours. Although Hartmann's procedure fell out of favour for rectal cancer after the introduction of restorative procedures, it remained the most common procedure in emergency setting for many years. Nowadays Hartmann's procedure is a useful procedure in selected cases e.g. severely ill patients with a high risk of anastomotic failure. However, restoring intestinal continuity for Hartmann patients is often associated with high morbidity, and about 70% will live with a permanent colostomy. Hartmann procedure' is a rapid and simple surgical technique intended to decrease perioperative morbidity and mortality. This technique is often performed by young surgeons Indeed, end colostomy may be necessary in situations where restoration of continuity is risky, either because of unfavorable local conditions or because a more definitive resection must be aborted due to hemodynamic instability. In the last decade the Hartmann's procedure has been revalued in many studies. In diverticular disease the results of DIVA arm of the LADIES trial showed that more patients in the primary anastomosis group were stoma free compared with patients in the Hartmann's procedure group. Other studies have observed no differences in major postoperative complications or postoperative mortality between patients undergoing primary anastomosis versus Hartmann's procedure. Hartmann's procedure reversals were associated with a higher risk of serious postoperative complications than were stoma reversals after primary anastomosis with ileostomy. Despite the growing evidence in favour of primary anastomosis and its inclusion as a valid treatment option for perforated diverticulitis or perforated sigmoid colon in recent clinical practice guidelines, some surgeons have been hesitant to undertake anastomosis in the setting of purulent or faecal contamination and continue to choose Hartmann's procedure to eliminate concerns about anastomotic leakage.
The introduction of modern staging systems has increased the detection of small peripheral lung cancers at an early stage [1]. Stage I non-small-cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) are confined to the lung without lymph node involvement, and surgical resection is currently considered the standard therapeutic approach. Nodal staging is initially performed non-invasively with computer tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans followed by minimally invasive staging with endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) when CT and/or PET are suggestive of mediastinal nodal involvement. Lobectomy with radical lymphadenectomy is currently considered the treatment of choice for early-stage lung cancer. Several studies demonstrated that primary invasive non- small-cell lung carcinomas > 2.0 cm were twice as likely to have nodal metastases as carcinomas ≤ 2.0 cm, emphasizing that small lung cancers had less lymph node involvement and confirming a better survival. In our pilot study [18] published in 2011 in the European Journal of Thoracic Surgery, no nodal involvement was observed in any of the 62 patients with pulmonary nodule size less than 10 mm, in 20 out of 120 patients (17%) with nodule size 11-20 mm, and in 9 out of 37 tumors (24%) 21-30 mm in size (p = 0.0007). These patients could be spared radical lymph node dissection if deemed not essential, thereby reducing operative risks, postoperative morbidity, and surgery time. A preoperative diagnostic determination to establish the size and correct staging of the tumor is mandatory for appropriate selection of candidates, avoiding unnecessary surgery.
Multicentre study; observational, longitudinal prospective, case-control
This is a multicenter, interventional, non-pharmacological study on a app for oral anticancer therapy management. A total of 124 patients will be considered. Patients will be randomized 1:1 to one of the following interventions: A. electronic diary B. paper diary The primary aim of the study is to assess the effectiveness of the electronic diary in improving adherence to oral therapy treatment compared to the paper diary, in patients with solid and haematological tumors.
The management of axillary nodes in breast cancer patients is a highly debated and evolving field. To date, an increasing number of patients with positive lymph nodes receives primary systemic therapy (PST) prior to surgery leading to down-staging axillary nodes in about 40% of women. However, the available diagnostic methods have several limitations in properly evaluating the response after treatment both in the breast and in the nodes and might lead to either under or over-treatment in these patients. Fully integrated scanners capable of simultaneous acquisition of PET and MRI have now been developed, with the potential to combine the specificity obtained by the functional imaging of PET, with the superior sensitivity of MRI, to provide higher diagnostic accuracy. It is expected that PET/MRI could better determine the response after PST to distinguish patients with negative versus patients with positive axillary nodes after medical treatment. As the excision of axillary nodes has mainly a staging purpose, the reliable identification of node negative patients might eventually spare women from unnecessary surgery. An accurate over-time and final imaging work-up might help choose the appropriate type of surgery according to the extent of nodal involvement: either SNB or complete axillary clearance.
Recurrence rate after curative treatment for locally advanced Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is reported varying from 15% to 30% of cases, while approximately 5-11% of patients present with de novo metastatic disease. In NPC, the immunogenicity of the cancer cell is derived from accumulated somatic mutations, but also from genomic and proteomic differences between host and Epstein Barr Virus (EBV). However, anti-cancer immune response tends to be feeble. This impaired anti-cancer immunity could be attributed to multiple factors including strategies to escape anti-cancer immunity. One of this is switch to immunosuppressive microenvironment, as well as aberrant negative co-stimulatory signals like PD-L1, that is over expressed in NPC. In 2017, the landmark KEYNOTE-028 trial firstly reported promising antitumor activities and safety profiles of pembrolizumab in previously treated RM-NPC Overall, after the treatment of PD-1 inhibitors, about 25% and 60% of the recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients achieved ORR and DCR, respectively, with a profile of toxicities in line with the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors in other diseases. Recently, it was found that some non-BRCA-mutated tumors often harbor other alterations in HR genes except for germline BRCA deleterious mutations, thus making these tumors could benefit from PARPi treatment. PARP could contribute to resistance to chemotherapy induced DNA damage, NPC cell platinum resistant could use PARP to repair and escape apoptosis. In nasopharyngeal carcinoma PARP1 is overexpressed in comparison with normal nasopharyngeal cells, LMP1 (latent membrane protein one) activates PARP1 and increases Poly(ADP-ribos)ylation (PARylation) through PARP1. A preclinical study demonstrates that LMP1+ cells are more sensitive to PARP1 inhibition. After receiving PARPi treatment, accumulated chromosome rearrangements generate plenty of neoantigens and elevate the immunogenicity of tumor, PARPi-mediated acute inflammation remodels tumor immune microenvironment and drives a systemic Th1-skewing immune response. Patients in the POINT trial will receive pembrolizumab 200 mg intravenously (IV) on Day 1 of every 3-week dosing cycle (Q3W) and olaparib 300 mg capsules twice a day (BID) every day starting from Day 1 of Cycle 1. Treatment with protocol therapy will continue until objective disease progression, any prohibitive toxicity or until a maximum of 35 treatment cycles (up to 2 years).