View clinical trials related to Neoplasm Metastasis.
Filter by:This research study is studying two different types of radiation as treatment for brain metastases (tumors in the brain that spread from a cancer that originated elsewhere in the body)
Pre-clinical evidence suggests that radiotherapy reduces tumour-associated vasculature. The investigators will conduct a single-arm prospective study to quantify the reduction in tumour vasculature post-radiotherapy
Advanced cancer patients often require palliative (pain relieving) radiotherapy to treat cancer-related symptoms. The delivery of radiation requires patients to lie still on a hard flat surface, which can result in significant acute (intense) pain and/or breakthrough cancer pain (sudden sharp or stabbing pain), especially when painful bone metastases are present. The current care for most cancer patients receiving radiation is to take an oral (by mouth) opioid medication before the radiation treatment. The pain relieving effects of these medications can take about one hour and can last for 3 to 6 hours, which does not follow the time course of when breakthrough cancer pain occurs. Lazanda is a pain medication delivered via an intranasal route and is already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the management of breakthrough cancer pain for patients who are already receiving opioids and who can tolerate opioids for the treatment of cancer pain. Lazanda is fast-acting and convenient for patients to take. The purpose of this study is to assess the change in pain intensity during palliative radiotherapy following study treatment with Lazanda. This study will also explore the impact of the study treatment on the efficiency in delivering the radiation therapy
The objective of this study is to identify the following in adolescent epilepsy participants with partial-onset seizures (with or without secondary generalized seizures) or primary generalized Tonic-clonic seizures who receive long-term treatment with Fycompa: 1. unknown adverse drug reactions (ADRs); 2. occurrence of ADRs; 3. factors that are likely to affect safety and efficacy; 4. occurrence of dizziness, balance disorders, ataxia, muscle relaxation-related adverse events, and falls as priority investigation items; 5. occurrence of psychiatric adverse events as priority investigation items (eg, aggression).
The objective of this study is to identify the following in adult epilepsy participants with partial-onset seizures (with or without secondary generalized seizures) or primary generalized Tonic-clonic seizures who receive long-term treatment with Fycompa: 1. unknown adverse drug reactions (ADRs); 2. occurrence of ADRs; 3. factors that are likely to affect safety and efficacy; 4. occurrence of dizziness, balance disorders, ataxia, muscle relaxation-related adverse events, and falls as priority investigation items; 5. occurrence of psychiatric adverse events as priority investigation items (eg, aggression).
This study will access the safety and efficacy of the Viatar™ Oncopheresis System to remove a meaningful quantity of circulating tumor cells from the blood of subjects' with breast, colon or prostate solid tumor cancers in a single treatment. CTC reduction will be measured as the change in circulating tumor cells as determined before and after treatment.
To improve the function and welfare of late stage solid cancer subjects by: - enabling subjects to benefit from a potentially promising drug under development - assessing initial evidence of improvement in Pain VAS score - assessing initial improvement in Performance Status (PS) - assessing initial improvement in oxygen saturation whenever it is feasible
To test the potential and acceptance of wireless activity tracking in palliative care patients leaving hospital care. Explorative study, collaboration project of the Clinic of Radiation-Oncology, University Hospital Zurich and the Wearable Computing Laboratory, Swiss Federal Institut of Technology. Patients receive a tracking bracelet and a smart phone in order to gather objective physical activity parameters as step count, sleep duration, heart rate, social activity patterns (e.g. making calls) as well as subjective ratings of pain and distress. Quality of life (QoL) will be captured by paper questionnaire. Correlations between patients' physical activity patterns and the pain and distress level assessed from electronic scales as well as QoL-questionnaire will be performed. Acceptance will be evaluated by quantitative questionnaires and interviews. The proposed study is meant to be preparatory work for an intervention study to test the effect of wireless monitoring of palliative care patients on fostering early interventions for symptom relief and support of QoL.
This study will assess and compare the diagnostic performances and image quality of two WB 3D T1-weighted MR imaging sequences for bone and node staging in patients with prostate cancer : the FSE sequence and a gradient echo (GE) sequence. The latter sequence's main feature is its acquisition time of approximately 1.5 minutes, compared to 18 min for the FSE sequence, reducing the exam's acquisition time, patient discomfort and increasing machine availability.
This study was designed to analyze the prognosis and recurrence predictive factors of high risk patients (Clinical Risk Score≥3) of resectable colorectal liver metastasis. The efficacy of perioperative chemotherapy plus cetuximab and chemotherapy alone was compared for these patients.