Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The Dermacorder measures the electric field in the skin. Malignant skin lesions disrupt the skin's normal electric field and this abnormal electric field can be detected by the Dermacorder. Therefore the investigators are testing the hypothesis that the Dermacorder can provide useful data to guide in the diagnosis of skin disease.


Clinical Trial Description

The Dermacorder is a non-invasive medical device that scans a probe over the skin about 200 microns away from it and detects the electric field in the skin using capacitative coupling. Measurements of hundreds of malignant melanomas in mice indicated that these lesions generate an electric field that is easily detected. One previous clinical trial at the VA Medical Center in Hampton VA indicated an 80% reliability in predicting malignant lesions by their electric field. We have improved the Dermacorder over the past two years by enhancing its sensitivity and stability and must now determine if these improvements have improved its ability to detect malignant lesions. If the Dermacorder provides a reliable diagnosis of malignant lesions, its use could dramatically reduce the number of biopsies performed and this would significantly improve the quality of life for hundreds of thousands of Americans seeking the advice of dermatologists regarding suspicious lesions each year ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01014819
Study type Observational
Source Children's Hospital & Research Center Oakland
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2009
Completion date July 2011

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT04552990 - Use of Jet-injection in Photodynamic Therapy for Basal Cell Carcinoma Phase 2
Completed NCT04229277 - Fast Track Diagnosis of Skin Cancer by Advanced Imaging N/A
Completed NCT05608902 - Structural Description of Skin Biopsies With Dynamic Full-field Optical Coherence Tomography on Suspected Basal Cell Carcinoma Lesions, a Pilot Study (DOCTOBA)
Completed NCT05077033 - Intratumoral phIL12 GET Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04928222 - Placebo Microneedles in Healthy Volunteers (Part I) and Efficacy/Safety of Doxorubicin Microneedles in Basal Cell Cancer Subjects (Part II) Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04929535 - Hydrogen Peroxide Trial to Investigate the Efficacy of 30%H2O2 as a Topical Application Before Definitive Treatment Phase 2
Completed NCT02662244 - Long-pulsed 1064 nm Nd:YAG Laser Treatment of Basal Cell Carcinoma N/A
Completed NCT00959647 - A Study of Vismodegib (GDC-0449) in Patients Treated With Vismodegib in a Previous Genentech-sponsored Phase I or II Cancer Study Phase 2
Completed NCT00586040 - Photochemical Tissue Bonding Phase 2
Completed NCT00793169 - Serum Concentration of Lidocaine After Local Injection During Mohs Micrographic Surgery
Completed NCT00473343 - Metvix PDT in Participant With "High Risk" Basal Cell Carcinoma Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT06024629 - cOCT Versus LC-OCT for Diagnosing Basal Cell Carcinoma: a Diagnostic Cohort Study
Not yet recruiting NCT05324202 - New Imaging Procedures and Therapeutic Approach in Basal Cell Carcinoma Management N/A
Withdrawn NCT04099446 - A Non-Interventional Pilot Study to Explore the Skin Microbes in Skin Cancer
Completed NCT02902822 - Tele-dermatology of Skin Cancer in a Cohort of Local Health Authority Employees in the Province of Bergamo N/A
Completed NCT01208831 - An East Asian Study of LDE225 Phase 1
Completed NCT01201915 - A Study Evaluating the Efficacy and Safety of Vismodegib (GDC-0449) in Operable Basal Cell Carcinoma Phase 2
Completed NCT01260987 - Fractional CO2 Laser Assisted Photodynamic Therapy Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00472043 - PDT With Metvix 160 mg/g Cream Versus PDT With Placebo Cream in Patients With Primary Nodular Basal Call Carcinoma Phase 3
Completed NCT00005660 - The Evaluation of Oral Acitretin in the Treatment of Psoriasis, Cutaneous Disorders of Keratinization, Multiple Basal Cell Carcinomas and Other Retinoid Responsive Diseases N/A