View clinical trials related to Endometrial Cancer.
Filter by:This study is a Single-center, open, single-arm and non-randomized clinical trial in China. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of Arsenic trioxide for injection in patients with recurrent and metastatic ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer with P53 mutation A group of 20 women with histologically confirmed ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer who had previously received at least one line of standard system therapy and had relapsed or metastasized had a P53 mutation. The subjects of this study are histologically confirmed ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer patients with P53 mutation who had relapsed or metastasized after at least one line of standard system therapy. 20 subjects will be enrolled in this study. Main objectives of the study are Independent imaging and tumor markers assess ORR (objective response rate) in patients with recurrent and metastatic ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer with P53 mutation treated with Arsenic trioxide for injection, based on RECIST v1.1 (Response evaluation criteria in solid tumors) Secondary objectives including DCR (Disease control rate), CBR (Clinical benefit rate), PFS (Progression free survival), OS (Overall survival), DoR (Duration of response), safety and tolerability of Arsenic trioxide for injection, based on NCI CTCAE (National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events), evaluated by researchers and life quality. The study will be conducted in the department of obstetrics and gynecology in Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine affiliated Ruijin Hospital. Research intervention: injection Arsenic trioxide, 0.16mg/kg (maximum single dose is 10 mg), daily IV drip, d1 to d14, once every 28 days, for six cycles of treatment or until one of the following events occurs: Initiation of new anti-tumor therapy, disease progression, withdrawal of Informed consent form (ICF) and/or death. The duration of this study will be 2.5 years; the admission period will be 1.5 years and the follow-up period will be 1 year.
This is a Phase IB/II multi-cohort study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of targeted agents with or without cancer immune checkpoint therapy with atezolizumab in participant with recurrent and/or persistent endometrial cancer. The main protocol provides a platform for genomic screening with homogeneous basic eligibility criteria in order to direct study participants into biomarker-matched study cohorts consisting of testing targeted agents.
This is a multicenter, open-label, nonrandomized, Phase 2 umbrella study of retifanlimab in participants who have advanced or metastatic endometrial cancer that has progressed on or after platinum-based chemotherapy. retifanlimab will be administered as monotherapy or in combination with other immunotherapy or targeted agents.
Studying adjuvant hypofractionated whole pelvis radiation therapy in Endometrial Cancer.
Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological malignancy affecting women's health. About 15% of the patients will have local late disease (stage III) with high risk of recurrence and tumor related mortality. There is a consensus that adjuvant radiochemotherapy is needed for stage Ⅲ endometrial cancer, but the best modality of radiochemotherapy is still uncertain. The retrospective data of our center showed that the sequential radiochemotherapy of "chemotherapy-radiotherapy-chemotherapy" in the "sanwich" mode could improve the survival outcome in patients with advanced endometrial cancer. A multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled study to compare the "sanwich" mode of radiochemotherapy and the "concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by chemotherapy" mode will be carried out to determine the better modality of radiochemotherapy in stage III endometrial adenocarcinoma.
The role of small-volume lymph node disease (ITC and micro metastases) among patients with endometrial or cervical cancer submitted to sentinel node (SLN) procedure is not clearly defined. This study was designed to create a dataset of patients with lymph nodal disease. Data on type and volume of lymph nodal disease, therapeutic choices and oncological outcomes (DFS, OS, recurrence rate) will be collected and analyzed. This will allow to define the groups of patients who may need or for whom it can be avoided any adjuvant treatment on the basis of lymph node status.
The goal of this study is to evaluate short course radiation in the post-operative female pelvis after hysterectomy in stage III-IVA endometrial adenocarcinoma patients, or any stage patients with uterine serous or carcinosarcoma histology. The investigators hypothesize that short course pelvic radiation will have an acute and late grade 3-4 toxicity rate < 10%, and patients will benefit from both convenient and effective loco-regional control comparable to the traditional 5-6 weeks of radiation.
This study protocol evaluates the use of hysteroscopic endomyometrial resection in women diagnosed with atypical endometrial hyperplasia or grade I endometrial cancer who have not responded to anti-hormone therapy. Patients in this study wish to preserve fertility.
Postoperative ileus (POI) is a transient loss of coordinated peristalsis precipitated by surgery and exacerbated by opioid pain medication.So,how to provide patients with ideal analgesia without affecting the recovery of postoperative gastrointestinal function?This was a prospective randomized controlled study. A total of 105 patients who were scheduled for laparoscopic hysterectomy were randomly selected from The First Affiliated Hospital with Nanjing Medical University by random number table. These patients were randomly divided into three groups: fentanyl(F) group, oxycodone(O) group and butorphanol(B) group.
This study is being done to find out how often endometrial cancer recurs after the standard treatment as well as how often the standard treatment results in a lymphedema.