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Anus Neoplasms clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02981862 Completed - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

CaptHPV : Validation of the Method "CaptHPV" for the Diagnosis of Human Papillomavirus Associated Infiltrating Carcinomas

CaptHPV
Start date: December 19, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current project is based on the assumption that a diagnosis of human papillomavirus associated Infiltrating Carcinomas can be made from a blood sample for patient with Cervical Cancer, Vulvar Cancer, Anal Cancer, Oropharynx Cancer, Oral Cavity Cancer or Penis Cancer at any stage of the disease and including surgical treatment for the small tumors.

NCT ID: NCT02949596 Completed - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Prospective Cohort on Quality of Sexual Life Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Treated for Anal Cancer With Concurrent Chemotherapy and Intensity-modulated Radiotherapy

Start date: October 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Treatment of anal cancer has been always linked to quality of life. Recently, with development on radiotherapy technique, toxicities have been lowered with the maintenance of adequate rates of disease control. This trial intends to follow patients prospectively with questionnaires to evaluate sexual quality of life among patients who are who men who have sex with other men and have been subject to concurrent chemoradiotherapy with IMRT technique.

NCT ID: NCT02919969 Completed - Anal Cancer Clinical Trials

Pembrolizumab in Metastatic Anal Cancer

Start date: October 11, 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This research study is studying a targeted therapy as a possible treatment for advanced anal cancer. The following intervention will be involved in this study: -Pembrolizumab

NCT ID: NCT02873741 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

New Strategies to Assess Anal Cancer Risk In Women

ANCAR-WIHS
Start date: July 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this research is to study different strategies to identify women at highest risk for anal cancer. Primarily, investigators want to study a risk assessment called the Anal Cancer Risk Index; it gives women an overall number score based on risk factors that they may have for anal cancer, such as age, number of sexual partners, or smoking. Investigators seek to understand whether women with higher Anal Cancer Risk Index scores are more likely to have abnormal results on anal pap smears, HPV tests, or anal biopsies. The study team will collect swabs of the cervix and the anus to study different laboratory tests that could identify women at highest risk of cervical and anal cancer. These laboratory tests include an anal pap smear, tests for markers of disease and tests that detect the HPV types most likely to cause cancer. The study team would like to see which of these laboratory tests do the best job at predicting precancerous lesions in the anus and are better indicators of risk for cancer. After collecting these swabs, women will have a procedure called high resolution anoscopy where investigators look closely at the anus and biopsy any suspicious areas. Finally, the study team will look for HPV proteins and changes that HPV can make in cells to see if these tests predict anal lesions.

NCT ID: NCT02865135 Completed - Clinical trials for Cancer of Head and Neck

Trial To Test Safety And Efficacy Of Vaccination For Incurable HPV 16-Related Oropharyngeal, Cervical And Anal Cancer

Start date: March 30, 2017
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This research study is studying a therapeutic vaccine, named DPX-E7, as a possible treatment for Human Papilloma Virus or HPV related head and neck, cervical or anal cancer (positive for HLA-A*02).

NCT ID: NCT02489422 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Programs To Support You During Chemotherapy

PRO-YOU
Start date: August 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized pilot trial studies how well two supportive programs work for improving fatigue and depressive symptoms in patients with GI undergoing chemotherapy. Possible mediators such as psychological stress, circadian disruption, and inflammation, will also be explored.

NCT ID: NCT02402842 Completed - Clinical trials for Anal Canal Carcinoma

Clinical and Biological Interest of Taxanes in Advanced Squamous Cell Anal Carcinoma

Epitopes-HPV02
Start date: September 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Squamous cell carcinoma of the anal canal (SCCA) is a rare disease and mostly diagnosed at an early stage. After standard concurrent chemoradiation (CRT) with mitomycin (MMC) and 5-fluorouracil (5FU), the disease will recur in 20% of patients. After treatment failure (including salvage surgery), cisplatin-5FU combination is the standard option but complete response is a rare event and the prognosis remains poor with most patients' death occurring in the first 12 months. Decision making for physicians in this setting is only based on retrospective studies or small phase II clinical trials including less than 20 patients. Hence, no efficient standard of care is currently available for relapsing SCCA patients who are currently treated with a palliative intent. Between 2007 and 2013, 8 consecutive patients with advanced recurrent SCCA after CRT were treated with DCF regimen (docetaxel, cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil) in the Regional Cancer Institute of Franche Comté. After a median follow-up of 41 months, 4 patients (50%) achieved a complete response. Three patients underwent surgery of all involved metastatic sites. A pathological complete response was observed for all of them including in metastases occurring in irradiated fields, suggesting that taxane-based chemotherapy might be an effective strategy to circumvent resistance to radiotherapy (a preliminary cohort of 8 patients was published (Kim S et al Annals of oncology 2013). Furthermore, all complete responders were HPV 16, and high levels of specific T cell responses against Human Papillomavirus (HPV) HPV16-derived E6/E7 and telomerase were detected in 50% of complete responders suggesting the potential restoration of cancer immunosurveillance by this regimen. Then, the Epitopes-HPV02 multicenter phase II study will aim to confirm the new role of taxane-based chemotherapy in SCCA patients.

NCT ID: NCT02399813 Completed - Rectal Cancer Clinical Trials

A Phase 2 Study of Axalimogene Filolisbac (ADXS11-001) in Participants With Carcinoma of the Anorectal Canal

Start date: June 2, 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a single arm Phase 2 study. Stage 1 and 2 of the study are monotherapy evaluations of ADXS11-001 in 31 and 24 participants, respectively with persistent/recurrent, loco-regional or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma (SCCA) of the anorectal canal that have received at least 1 regimen for the treatment of advanced disease.

NCT ID: NCT02379039 Completed - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

Multimodal Monitoring of Radiotherapy Response in Squamous Cell Cancer

MORRIS
Start date: May 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study's aim is to define imaging and molecular bio-markers for prediction of radiotherapy response of squamous cell carcinomas, in an early treatment phase.

NCT ID: NCT02280811 Completed - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

T Cell Receptor Immunotherapy Targeting HPV-16 E6 for HPV-Associated Cancers

Start date: October 14, 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Background: The NCI Surgery Branch has developed an experimental therapy for treating patients with cancer that involves taking white blood cells from the patient, growing them in the laboratory in large numbers, genetically modifying these specific cells with a type of virus (retrovirus) to attack only the tumor cells, and then giving the cells back to the patient. This type of therapy is called gene transfer. Researchers want to test this on human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated cancers. Objective: - The purpose of this study is to determine a safe number of these cells to infuse and to see if these particular tumor-fighting cells (Anti-HPV E6) can shrink tumors associated with HPV and test the toxicity of this treatment. Eligibility: - Adults age 18-66 with an HPV-16-associated cancer. Design: - Work up stage: Patients will be seen as an outpatient at the NIH clinical Center and undergo a history and physical examination, scans, x-rays, lab tests, and other tests as needed - Leukapheresis: If the patients meet all of the requirements for the study they will undergo leukapheresis to obtain white blood cells to make the anti HPV E6 cells. {Leukapheresis is a common procedure, which removes only the white blood cells from the patient.} - Treatment: Once their cells have grown, the patients will be admitted to the hospital for the conditioning chemotherapy, the anti HPV E6 cells and aldesleukin. They will stay in the hospital for about 4 weeks for the treatment. Follow up: Patients will return to the clinic for a physical exam, review of side effects, lab tests, and scans about every 1-3 months for the first year, and then every 6 months to 1 year as long as their tumors are shrinking. Follow up visits take up to 2 days.