View clinical trials related to Endometrial Neoplasms.
Filter by:Complete pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy performed at the time of primary surgical staging for endometrial cancer increases operative time and surgical morbidity, but appears to be necessary in most high grade and deeply invasive cancers. To date, the Mayo Clinic approach has not been reproduced, and the investigators propose to validate their algorithm at the University of Kentucky utilizing intra-operative consultation (IOC). The preliminary data at the University of Kentucky for IOC and endometrial cancer outcomes suggest that the investigators are well-suited to perform this investigation. A surgical approach that is tailored to the patient's cancer biology is rational, supported by the recent literature, and medically compelling since the co-morbidities of many obese, low-risk EC patients put them at significantly increased perioperative risk for complete lymphadenectomy.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate whether a new technology called intrauterine photoacoustic endoscopy (PAE) can be used to evaluate the inner lining of the uterus.
The purpose of this study is to see if the investigators can measure inhibition of a protein, Src (named for Sarcoma), in tissue and blood in patients with a diagnosis of endometrial cancer. Dasatinib is a drug that blocks the activity of an important protein in cancer cells called Src. The investigators can measure the blocking of Src in the bloodstream. However, the investigators do not know if measures in the bloodstream reflect blockage of Src in cancer tissue. The investigators are doing this study to try and see if the investigators can match what the investigators see in cancer tissue to what the investigators see in the bloodstream. the investigators hope that in the future, the investigators can use blood to measure protein inhibition by dasatinib instead of asking patients to undergo repeat biopsies.
The use of robotic surgery in the management of gynecologic cancers has increased exponentially in the United States since the implementation of technology in 2005. In Canada, access to the system is limited because of a lack of government funding. The government has been reluctant to fund this technology because robust data, on the true impact to patient care, is lacking. This project will prospectively examine outcomes of women, with early stage endometrial cancer, treated surgically. Open surgery will be compared to minimally invasive surgery (MIS) which will include conventional laparoscopy and robotic surgery. The data collected will include detailed assessment of surgical data, peri-operative events, quality of life analysis, health economic evaluation and evaluation of MIS rates.
This is a randomized trial of 140 women with endometrial or cervical cancer undergoing removal of lymph tissue (lymphadenectomy). The application of 4 tachosil fibrin patches to the pelvic side wall after tissue removal is tested against no such intervention after tissue removal. The primary endpoint is to evaluate the incidence of symptomatic pelvic lymphoceles defined by CTCAE 4.03 grade >2 within 4 weeks after surgery in women undergoing open or laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy for cervical and endometrial cancer with and without the application of Tachosil® during surgery. The study's hypothesis is that the application of tachosil fibrin patches will significantly reduce the rate of symptomatic lymph cysts.
The surgical management of high-risk endometrial cancer often involves an extensive operation to remove lymph nodes as sites of possible cancer spread. 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging is increasingly being used to identify sites of cancer spread and recently groups have used an intra-operative gamma probe to better localize metastatic disease. In this pilot study, patients with newly diagnosed early stage, high-risk endometrial cancer undergoing primary surgery will have a pre-operative PET scan and intra-operative localization of metastatic lymph nodes with the use of a gamma probe. A complete lymphadenectomy will follow and ability to detect positive lymph nodes of both PET scan and the intra-operative probe will be calculated. This study addresses the feasibility of an FDG detection gamma probe in addition to a pre-operative PET/CT for lymphatic mapping in women with clinical early stage high risk endometrial cancer. The study will also evaluate the role of identifying metastatic lymph nodes intraoperatively that would otherwise be clinically negative.
The aim of this study is to compare the robotic-assisted laparoscopic surgery to the traditional laparoscopic surgery in endometrial cancer patients. The study is prospective and the patients are randomised into two groups of 50 patients each. Randomisation is done with Minim-programme and patients age and Body mass index are taken into account. The primary endpoint is the operation time. The number of patients in this study is based on the non-inferiority design. Presumption is that the operation time in robotic-assisted laparoscopy will be 25% longer. Secondary endpoints include: 1. bleeding 2. complications 3. conversions 4. number of pelvic lymph nodes
The purpose of this study is to treat advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer, paclitaxel-containing regimen is the preferred chemotherapeutic regimen which is selected by most physicians. Docetaxel may have similar efficacy and more favorable treatment related toxicity profile as tested in epithelial ovarian cancer trials. Therefore, the investigators aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of docetaxel plus cisplatin in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer.
Previous some studies suggested the addition of chemotherapy to radiation therapy after surgery may have survival benefit in patients with high risk endometrial cancer. In addition, docetaxel plus cisplatin regimen may have similar efficacy with paclitaxel plus carboplatin which is currently used in most cases. However, docetaxel plus cisplatin may cause less toxicity compared to paclitaxel plus carboplatin. Therefore, the investigators aimed to analyze the efficacy of docetaxel plus cisplatin regimen followed by radiation therapy after surgery in patients with high risk endometrial cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine the activity, tolerability and safety of Temsirolimus in women with ovarian cancer who progressed during the previous platinum chemotherapy alternatively within 6 months from completion of therapy or advanced endometrial carcinoma.