View clinical trials related to Prostate Cancer.
Filter by:This is a phase 3, randomised, multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial investigating the use of short term androgen deprivation therapy in the form of apalutamide (Erleada) in men on active surveillance for prostate cancer.
NUV-422-04 is an open-label Phase 1b/2 dose escalation and expansion study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of NUV-422 in combination with enzalutamide. The study population is comprised of adults with mCRPC. Patients will self-administer NUV-422 and 160 mg enzalutamide orally in 28-day cycles. Patients will be treated until disease progression, toxicity, withdrawal of consent, or termination of the study.
The goal of this clinical research is to find if sequential therapy with combined androgen deprivation or hormonal therapy with luteinizing hormone release hormone (LHRH) analog plus a new hormonal agent (abiraterone, enzalutamide, or apalutamide) followed by chemohormonal therapy with docetaxel and LHRH analog would improve the outcome of high risk metastatic/stage IV prostate cancer.
By incorporating dual-tracer PET/CT (PSMA and FDG) and ctDNA, we aimed to evaluate lesion heterogeneity and genomic change of mCRPC patients receiving novel hormonal therapy. The relationship between treatment response and different molecular characterization, as well as imaging features would also be evaluated.
In this project, the investigators aim to evaluate the most appropriate design and implementation strategy of a decision-aid to promote shared-decision making in prostate cancer screening.
This is an observational study where prostate cancer related PROMs (EPIC-26) is collected using two different methods (by paper questionnaires and electronically) and patient experience and preference is asked.
Preventing pre-surgical stress can help patients achieve positive outcomes on health and well-being. However, very few patients receive adequate stress relief support prior to a surgical procedure. Provision of education and information about the surgery can be a crucial component of the preoperative experience and is inversely related to levels of preoperative anxiety. However, resource constraints make face-to-face education sessions untenable, given cost considerations and time investment by trained health personnel. Interventions based on mobile health (mHealth) technologies, geared towards increasing familiarity with surgical procedures and hospital environments have been shown to help patients feel informed about possible benefits and risks of available treatment options. mHealth apps and Virtual Reality (VR) can offer patients experience in the perioperative environment that can be helpful in empowering patients and enhancing a more positive experience, while reducing stress. However, available applications focus only on providing informative content, neglecting the importance of patient empowerment with a more robust educational curriculum. According to this, the Software as a Medical Device (SaMD) CARINAE, aims to support patients and caregivers during the whole perioperative process. SaMD CARINAE consists of an mHealth mobile application for patients and caregivers, a Virtual Reality headset for patients, and a web application for healthcare professionals.
1. To investigate the tolerability of MR-linac based stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (MRL-SBRT)for patients with localized prostate cancer 2. To assess the acute and late toxicities, efficacy and quality of life for patients treated by MRL-SBRT 3. To simulate the dose planning and assess the feasibility of simultaneous-boost for MR-prominent foci 4. To investigate the relationship between the changes of blood and tissue biomarkers and manifestations on mp-MRI pre-/post-MRL-SBRT, to further ascertain the predictive factors of local persisting and/or relapse disease
To evaluate the safety profile of FIRMAGON (to fulfill the regulatory authority's requirement of Intensive Drug Monitoring in Chinese patients with prostate cancer need androgen deprivation therapy [ADT] treated with FIRMAGON). Study Design This study is a multi-center, single-arm, non-interventional, prospective study among Chinese patients with prostate cancer and need ADT receiving treatment with FIRMAGON. This program will provide the minimum 6 doses and maximum 12 doses of FIRMAGON to enrolled patients during one-year follow-up. Patients who meet inclusion criteria and will or are accepting at least 6 self-financed doses treatment in hospital. Patients should return to the hospital for medical assessment every three months. The prescription of 6 (3 dose × 2 times) self-financed doses will be given by doctors after assessment, and the direct-to-patient pharmacy will distribute FIRMAGON to eligible patients (patients should bring the prescriptions and the last FIRMAGON boxes to get other doses). All enrolled patients will be followed up to collect safety information for one year from the 1st dose unless withdrawal of Informed Consent Form, discontinuation for 2 months, lost to follow-up, death, or termination due to other reasons, whichever comes first.
To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of the Mitomic Prostate Test (MPT) comparing to prostate biopsy within the intended use population.