View clinical trials related to Early-Stage Breast Cancer.
Filter by:The goal of this RCT is to compare percent weight change in early breast cancer who takes medical supplement or not, during treatment with chemotherapy (standard AC regimen). The main question is • the change of weight (%) before and after complete treatment of breast cancer therapy. Participants will be randomized into 2 group - intervention group - receive medical supplement daily during chemotherapy treatment. - control group - Nutritional advise during chemotherapy treatment.
This study is being done to evaluate cosmetic, patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), and toxicities for women undergoing ultra-short whole breast irradiation (WBI) therapy with simultaneous integrated boost (SIB). 50 participants will be on study for up to 60 months.
The purpose of this post-market, prospective study is to assess the ability of AMMA to prevent hair loss in women receiving chemotherapy (CT) for early-stage breast cancer.
The present study aims to investigate a proactive strategy including Salovum™ and SPC-flakes to prevent the occurrence of abemaciclib-induced diarrhea in patients with early breast cancer.
Out of all proportion to its short duration, the perioperative period is critical in determining the long-term outcome of cancer. To contribute to a better understanding of the neural and inflammatory mechanisms underlying this issue, we aim to implement a novel intervention based on the preoperative use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) with or without an anti-epileptic drug. Our goal is to understand and transform the perioperative window from being a facilitator of metastatic progression to arresting and/or eliminating residual disease using repurposing drugs
This is a multi-center, double blind, prospective, placebo controlled, randomized phase III clinical trial to further validate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant pyrotinib combined with chemotherapy in HR-positive/HER2-low (IHC 2+/FISH-negative) early breast cancer
This is a single center prospective observational cohort study that aims to: - examine and identify possible risk and susceptibility factors for the incidence and progression of chemotherapy-induced polyneuropathy (CIPN) in female patients primarily operated for early non-metastatic breast cancer who will receive adjuvant chemotherapy containing paclitaxel - test different neurophysiological methods for early detection of CIPN - explore changes that underlie the development of CIPN in relation to clinical presentations, neurophysiological assessment, including measures of small nerve fiber dysfunction, and possible biochemical, metabolic and genetic associations - explore the effects of CIPN in the patient's lifestyle and quality of life for up to 12 months after the initiation of treatment
This is a prospective, multicenter, registry-based cohort study to explore the efficacy and safety of Pyrotinib combined with Capecitabine for adjuvant treatment of HER2 positive early breast cancer compared with treatment of physician's choice. Pyrotinib is a small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor which can irreversibly inhibit HER1, HER2, and HER4.
The adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) of the early-stage breast cancer patients as local treatment aims to eliminate the potential microscopic residual disease in the surgery bed or satellites in its neighborhood. Nowadays accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) is recommended for highly selected patients. This prospective randomized study compares the targeted external beam APBI with commonly used accelerated whole-breast irradiation (WBI) in terms of feasibility, safety, tolerance, and cosmetic effects. It is designed as non-inferiority trial and its aim is to increase the level of evidence for establishment of external beam APBI in indicated patients into daily clinical practice.
In this research study, investigators are testing if a dose-increasing strategy for abemaciclib will have less side effects and be better tolerated than the standard dosage of abemaciclib for participants with early-stage high-risk hormone receptor positive breast cancer. The names of the study drugs involved in this study are: - Abemaciclib (CDK4 and CDK6 inhibitor) - Tamoxifen (Selective estrogen receptor modulator) - Anastrozole/Letrozole (Non-steroidal aromatase inhibitors) - Exemestane (steroidal aromatase inhibitor) - LHRH (Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist, or Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonist)