View clinical trials related to Breast.
Filter by:This is a multicentre real-world experience aimed at verifying the outcome of palbociclib plus ET in an unselected population of MBC patients. The primary endpoint is the clinical benefit rate (CBR); secondary aims are the median PFS (mPFS), overall survival (OS) and safety.
Brief Summary: The QT Ultrasound system is an automated scanner which transmits pulsed ultrasound plane waves through the breast, as well as collects reflected ultrasound output. As the patient lays prone on a table, the breast is submerged in a warm water bath. The transmitter and receiver assembly moves around the suspended breast to record data for successive sub-volumes of targeted tissue. More than 2000 elements in the curvilinear transducer's array encircle the breast to gather data from the tissue structures of the breast, from nipple to chest wall. Information gathered from this automated QT scan encompasses the entire breast which is currently not commercially available using any other ultrasound technology.
Background: - Some cancer cells have a large amount of a protein called P-glycoprotein, which can pump certain chemotherapy drugs out of their cells. This pump may be part of the reason why it is difficult to shrink some cancers with chemotherapy. - In laboratory experiments, the drug CBT-1(Registered Trademark) blocked the P-glycoprotein pump, resulting in accumulation of higher amounts of chemotherapy inside the cancer cells, making the chemotherapy more effective. - Paclitaxel is a cancer drug that has caused tumors to shrink in many types of cancers, including lung, ovarian, breast, renal, cervical and others. Objectives: - To determine whether CBT-1(Registered Trademark) can block the P-glycoprotein pump on cancer cells and whether it inhibits the action of the pump found in normal blood cells and liver tissue. - To evaluate the effectiveness of combination therapy using CBT-1(Registered Trademark) and paclitaxel in treating solid tumors and to determine whether the two drugs together are more effective than paclitaxel alone. Eligibility: -Patients over 18 years of age who have a solid tumor that cannot be treated successfully with standard treatments. Design: -Patients receive CBT-1(Registered Trademark) and paclitaxel in 21-day cycles. Treatment continues for two cycles after all the cancer is gone, or until it is decided to surgically remove some or all of the remaining cancer, or until the cancer has grown to the point where it defined as progressive disease. For each cycle, patients take CBT-1(Registered Trademark) by mouth in three divided doses daily for 7 days. On day 6, paclitaxel is given through a vein over 3 hours. Blood tests are done before starting CBT-1(Registered Trademark) and repeated periodically throughout treatment. Imaging studies computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (CT or MRI) are done every two cycles. In addition, for the first cycle only, patients undergo imaging of tumors and normal tissue with a 99mTc-sestamibi radionuclide scan before and after administration of CBT-1(Registered Trademark). This scan helps show how well the P-glycoprotein pump is being blocked by the treatment.
1. Determine the response rate with this regimen in an anthracycline and taxane resistant cohort of patients.
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a standardized botanical extract of Pycnogenol as a treatment for stable arm lymphedema in breast cancer survivors.
Background: -This protocol will provide a means for screening potential candidates for NCI Radiation Oncology Branch (ROB) protocols. Objectives: -To permit evaluation of patients referred to the NCI Radiation Oncology Branch in order to identify individuals who will be suitable candidates for Radiation Oncology Branch clinical research protocols. Eligibility: -Patients suspected of having, or with biopsy proven malignant disease or patients with a benign condition for whom radiotherapy is a potential treatment. Design: -This is a screening protocol. No investigational treatments will be administered on this protocol.