View clinical trials related to Prostate Cancer.
Filter by:There is an increasing number of reports describing the existence of a proportion of prostate cancer patients who present with a reduced number of metastases (<5 lesions) at relapse. This oligometastatic status has also been recognized in other tumor types such as melanoma, soft tissue sarcoma, liver, lung, and breast cancer, and has influenced the management of these malignancies in that a more radical treatment such as surgical resection has been employed. Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography (PET-CT) studies with tracers such as choline or acetate are reliable tools to help with the diagnosis of oligometastatic disease after biochemical treatment failure in prostate cancer. An aggressive treatment combining androgen depriving therapy (ADT) and and high-dose irradiation to the oligometastatic lesions, as detected by PET-CT, may be proposed for these oligometastatic patients. Such a treatment strategy may hypothetically succeed to prolong the failure-free interval between two consecutive ADT courses, or even cure selected patients with limited metastatic burden. In this study the investigators plan to assess biochemical or clinical relapse-free survival at 2 years of prostate cancer with 1-5 oligometastases treated concomitantly with high-dose conformal Radiation Therapy and LH-RH agonists.
This is an open-label exploratory study of CTAP101 Capsules in patients with bone metastases arising from either breast or prostate cancer, who are taking anti-resorptive therapy.
The aim of the present phase III study is two-folded: 1) to show a superiority of external beam radiotherapy combined with a brachytherapy boost versus exclusive external beam radiotherapy and 2) to evaluate the economic impact of each treatment. The study includes 33 cancer centres, the inclusion time is of 2 years and the follow-up is of 5 years.
This study will develop a first-in-man CTC-based molecular taxonomy of CRPC in the context of novel AR-directed therapies, categorize different patterns of resistance in this disease setting, and describe their evolution over time and treatment.
This study is comparing the effectiveness of enzalutamide with or without abiraterone acetate for men with high-risk, localized prostate cancer.
The investigators aim to evaluate cancer control, genitourinary, rectal and overall health-related quality of life outcomes and effectiveness of focal therapy for localised prostate cancer using High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of patients treated with an high dose radiation regimen using either stereotactic hypofractionated or normofractionated radiotherapy for oligometastatic prostate cancer and to establish efficacy (producing a desired result or effect) and safety in this setting.
The study will be conducted in 2 Stages. The primary objective of Stage 1 of the study is to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of ES414 administered intravenously to patients with mCRPC. Secondary objectives are to evaluate the tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), immunogenicity, cytokine response, and clinical activity of ES414. The primary objective of Stage 2 of the study is to evaluate the clinical activity of ES414 in patients that have or have not received prior chemotherapy. Secondary objectives are to further characterize the safety profile, PK, PD, and immunogenicity of ES414.
There is no randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing Conformal Radiotherapy (3DCRT) versus the Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) in terms of toxicity and disease control. Data from retrospective studies show that IMRT reduces the risk of severe late complications. More recently, the results from the RTOG 0126 study have also confirmed the benefit from IMRT in reducing acute toxicity for prostate cancer treated with conventional dose escalation. Therefore, to investigate the real clinical benefit of the IMRT over 3DCRT using a hypofractionated schedule in prostate cancer, the investigators developed a RCT.
The aim of this registry is to assess the recurrence of prostate cancer at 1 and 5 years, as well as the change in functional outcomes (e.g. incontinence or erectile function) from baseline. Secondary objectives are to establish which indications lead to treatment with IRE Nanoknife® setting and safety assessment measured by number of complications and adverse events.