View clinical trials related to Prostate Cancer.
Filter by:Sympathetic activity could be increased during robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, which is performed in a steep trendelenburg position under CO2 pneumoperitoneum. Stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system prolongs the QT interval and can increases the susceptibility to life threatening cardiac arrhythmias. Dexmedetomidine has sympatholytic effects and potential antiarrhythmic properties. Perioperative administration of dexmedetomidine is a potential preventive and treatment strategy for tachyarrhythmia. Thus the investigators decided to evaluate the effect of dexmedetomidine on heart-rate corrected QT interval during robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. Furthermore, the investigators evaluated the Tp-e, Tp-e/QT ratio and Tp-e/QTc ratio as well.
There is evidence in human studies as well as animal studies that treatments to lower cholesterol can reduce the risk of dying from prostate cancer.To decide if cholesterol-lowering therapy can slow the growth of prostate cancer, the investigators would like to lower cholesterol prior to surgery and then measure the growth of prostate cancers cells when the prostate has been removed. The investigators will use the combination of two drugs that is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to lower cholesterol. The drug combination is commercially available with a doctor's prescription and sold as Vytorin®. It is known that maximal cholesterol-lower effects are seen after 2 weeks of treatment with Vytorin®. Therefore, study patients receive at least 2 weeks, but no more than 6 weeks of Vytorin® prior to surgery.
The purpose of this study is to use a new imaging drug called 11C-choline that is used with a PET/CT scan to see prostate cancer when it cannot be seen well on other scans, such as bone scans, CT or MRI.
The purpose of this trial is to compare the severity of ISRs (Injection Site Reactions) following degarelix subcutaneous (s.c.) administrations with two different injection techniques and intramuscular (i.m.) administration in patients with hormone dependent prostate cancer.
This pilot clinical trial studies how well magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) with hyperpolarized carbon 13 (13C) pyruvate alone or in combination with 13C 15N2 Urea works in finding prostate cancer that exhibits poorly differentiated or undifferentiated cells (high-grade) and that is restricted to the site of origin, without evidence of spread (localized) in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy. Diagnostic procedures, such as MRSI with hyperpolarized carbon (13C) pyruvate, may aid in the diagnosis of prostate cancer and in discriminating high-grade from low-grade prostate cancer and benign adjacent prostate tissue
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of Focal-Fusion Bx at detecting clinically significant prostate cancer in a standard clinical environment.
The goal of the study is to provide a detailed description of treatments for CRPC (Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer) patients with bone metastases and the resource utilization and costs associated with that diagnosis and subsequent treatments.
Merge the data of ultrasound with that of the anatomical and functional MRI is necessary since the high dose rate Curietherapy is carried out under ultrasound guidance. The investigators will recruit prostate cancer patients to evaluate the quality of the data, their sensitivity to exam conditions (patient position, volume of endorectal probe, gold grains implanted before intensity modulated radiotherapy , IMRT) and to merge data from different sources with the purpose of estimating the opportunities of integration treatment plan for Curietherapy broadband. The nuclear magnetic resonance imaging provides precise anatomical study, but also provides access to a functional approach to the tumor mapping of water diffusion coefficient (DW-MRI), for dynamic imaging with injection contrast agent (DCE-MRI) and finally by spectroscopic imaging (IRMS). This multimodality imaging project is part of a multidisciplinary context, involving close collaboration between clinicians, medical physicists, and physicists of the teams participating in this project (Institut Gustave Roussy and U2R2M-CIERM hospital Kremlin-Bicetre).
Ongoing follow up for subjects implanted with the Linear Source String for prostate cancer.
This is a phase I, open-label trial to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of INO 5150 alone or in combination with INO-9012 when delivered intramuscularly (IM) followed by electroporation (EP) in men with biochemically relapsed prostate cancer.