View clinical trials related to Advanced Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:A phase I clinical trial of tolerability and pharmacokinetics of TQB2858 injection in subjects with advanced malignancy.
This is a single center phase 1 trail to observe safety and efficacy of Paclitaxel plus Cisplatin\Carboplatin, PD-L1 antibody Toripalimab and Anlotinib as first-line regimen to treat the patient with metastatic 、persistent or recurrent disease after radical surgery、radical platinum-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy or both (Stage IA-IVA).
This is a randomized, double-blind, controlled, parallel-cohort Phase II clinical study, which is planned to enroll 220 subjects with advanced cervical cancer who have failed or cannot tolerate first-line or above platinum-based chemotherapy
This is a single center phase 1 trail to observe safety and efficacy of metronomic capecitabine plus PD-L1 antibody camrelizumab as third-line regimen to treat HER2 negative advanced gastric cancer patients. This study is one of the cohorts of a multi-cohort trial called Combination of Metronomic capecitabine with Camrelizumab for treatment of refractory solid tumor (McCrest) trial.
The para-aortic lymph node involvement in the advanced stage of cervical cancer is a poor prognostic factor for overall survival. Concomitant chemo-radiotherapy has become the standard treatment for advanced cervical cancer. In case of para-aortic lymph node involvement, an extension of radiotherapy fields is recommended. A prospective multicentre study shown that the survival rate of patients with node ≤ 5 mm and which benefited from the expansion of radiotherapy fields was identical to the survival of pN0 patients. However, due to a specific disease, this technique should not be performed in all patients. It is necessary to reliably select patients with retroperitoneal lymph node involvement. For this, it is recommended that prior to the concurrent chemo-radiotherapy, nodal staging surgery with a definitive histological analysis. So we propose to use molecular diagnostic test OSNA (One Step Nucleic Acid Amplification) to improve lymph node metastasis detection sensitivity to achieve ultra-staging compared to conventional histology.
Locally advanced cervical cancer at higher risk for recurrence (HRLACC) following concurrent chemotherapy and radiation therapy. This is a group of participants with a significant unmet need. The estimated probability of disease recurrence or death within 4 years of diagnosis is 50% and the prognosis is very grave for those who experience a recurrence. The purpose of the study was to compare the disease free survival (DFS) of ADXS11-001 to placebo administered following cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy and radiation (CCRT) with curative intent in participants with HRLACC.
Chemoradiotherapy has become the standard of care for women with locally advanced cervical cancer. The available data support a 30 to 50% reduction in the risk of death from cervical cancer for women with locally advanced disease undergoing radiotherapy (RT) and concomitant cisplatin-based chemotherapy compared to RT alone. Despite the fact that this is currently the best treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer, 5-year overall survival is still only 52%. The fully human, agonist monoclonal antibody mapatumumab binds to the Tumor necrosis factor-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand Receptor 1 (TRAIL-R1, DR4) and induces cytotoxicity in multiple tumor cell lines in vitro and in vivo. In multiple phase I and phase II studies, mapatumumab appeared to be safe both as single agent and in combination with chemotherapy, including cisplatin. In cervical cancer cell lines, mapatumumab induced apoptosis in 51% of the cells. Mapatumumab in combination with irradiation increased apoptosis to 83%. In this phase 1b/2 study, the investigators will evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of mapatumumab in combination with cisplatin and radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer.