View clinical trials related to Endometrial Cancer.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to evaluate the sentinel node policy in early stage endometrial carcinomas at intermediate and high risk of recurrence (by comparing the sentinel node policy to current initial staging protocols).
Part of standard treatment for endometrial cancer is to remove one or more groups of lymph nodes (lymph node dissection). Lymph nodes are small, bean-shaped organs located within the body throughout the lymphatic system (the tissues and organs involved in immunity, which aids in the fight against infection and cancer). The purpose of this study is to compare the safety and ability of Lymphoseek and a Vital Blue Dye (tracing agent) to find lymph nodes that may carry cancer from the tumor through the lymphatic system. Lymphoseek will be injected into the tumor on the day before surgery to remove lymph nodes. Vital Blue Dye will be administered during surgery to trace the cancer as well. The surgeon will remove the lymph nodes as part of routine surgery and will keep track of which lymph nodes are identified by Lymphoseek and Vital Blue Dye. These nodes will be sent to another doctor to view them under a microscope and see if the nodes contain cancer cells. The hypothesis is that Lymphoseek can be used safely and will be at least as effective as blue dye in identifying the lymph nodes that may have cancer cells.
This trial is a Phase 1b/2a/3 trial designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of adding oral AL3818 (Anlotinib, INN: Catequentinib), a Dual Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor, to standard platinum-based chemotherapy concurrently in Subjects with Recurrent or Metastatic Endometrial, Ovarian, Fallopian, Primary Peritoneal or Cervical Carcinoma.
RATIONALE: Placing a tumor antigen chimeric receptor that has been created in the laboratory into patient autologous or donor-derived T cells may make the body build immune response to kill cancer cells. PURPOSE: This clinical trial is studying genetically engineered lymphocyte therapy in treating patients with Relapsed and/or Chemotherapy Refractory Advanced Malignancies.
The primary aim of this trial is to determine whether lymphadenectomy, used to restrict adjuvant therapy (other than vaginal brachytherapy) to node positive women, results in a non-inferior survival as compared to adjuvant therapy given to all women with high risk apparent stage 1 endometrial cancer.
The study evaluates pre-operative prediction of the risk for lymph nodes involvement in endometrial cancer patients. Patients will undergo ultrasound exam (bi and three dimensional) and biomarker test - Ca 125, in addition to routine physical and laboratory exams, before surgery. The sonographic evaluation will include endometrial characteristics and myometrial invasion, pelvic findings and enlarged lymph nodes.
The purpose of Part 1 (Phase 1b) is to evaluate the general safety and tolerability of repeated 21-day cycles of AL3818 therapy, and to reevaluate the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). The purpose of Part 2 (Phase 2a) is to evaluate the efficacy of repeated 21-day cycles of AL3818 therapy preliminary efficacy of AL3818 in subjects with recurrent or metastatic endometrial, ovarian or cervical cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of LY3023414 in treating the participants type of cancer and to determine the types and severity of side effects caused by treatment with LY3023414.
This is a single-arm, open-label, multi-center phase II study for subjects with measurable advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer using pembrolizumab in combination with carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy. As this combination of agents has not been tested in this subject population, the first six subjects enrolled will constitute a safety run-in cohort.
MoMaTEC2 aims to test, in clinically oriented studies, the applicability of already identified and promising molecular biomarkers, to promote individualisation of treatment for patients with endometrial cancer. Predominantly, but not exclusively, such biomarkers have shown to be interesting in retrospective analysis of our large prospectively collected MoMaTEC1 series. Part 1: Performance of a phase 4 implementation trial for optimised stratification of surgical treatment, specifically the performance of (para-aortic and pelvic) lymphadenectomy guided by validated biomarkers. Part 2: Performance of a phase 2b clinical biomarker study to evaluate the predictive potential of the biomarker stathmin for taxane treatment response in endometrial and ovarian cancer. In this study stathmin will be used as integrated biomarker.