View clinical trials related to Carcinoma in Situ.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to test the safety and efficacy of an investigational immunotherapy VGX-3100, in combination with a study device, to treat women with vulvar high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) [vulval intraepithelial neoplasia 2 or 3 (VIN 2 or VIN 3)] associated with human papilloma virus (HPV) types 16 and/or 18. VGX-3100 is being assessed as an alternative to surgery with the potential to clear the underlying HPV infection. For more information visit our study website at: www.VINresearchstudy.com
This project is an immunohistochemical study of archived patient breast tissue, specifically pre-invasive lesion specimens. The purpose is the discovery of novel molecular markers of pre-invasive breast lesions. These novel markers, once validated in this study, can serve as targets for individualized prevention therapy, neoadjuvant therapy for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), or predictors of lesion aggressiveness. We have discovered two novel classes of DCIS molecular pathways required for the survival of DCIS neoplastic cells that will serve as the basis for the candidate molecules to be evaluated in this proposed study. The first class of DCIS molecular markers is autophagy, a cell survival mechanism that we discovered to be highly augmented in the hypoxic and nutrient deprived intraductal neoplastic cells of human DCIS (1-4). The second class of biomarker is calcium efflux that is mediated in breast cells by the calcium export pump Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase (PMCA2) (5, 6). During normal lactation, breast epithelium pumps large concentrations of calcium into milk. In neoplastic lesions, calcium is exported by PMCA2 as a cell survival mechanism, since cells under metabolic stress accumulate calcium to a toxic level. Calcium export in DCIS may also contribute to intraductal calcifications, a hallmark of high grade DCIS and the most common marker of DCIS on mammography (7). Sentara cares for hundreds of patients per year who are diagnosed with breast pre-invasive lesions, including atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH), ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS). Sentara treats 25% of the women with breast cancer in Virginia. Coupled with information from the Sentara Cancer Registry, Dr. Hoefer or a research team member will identify eligible patients with ADH, DCIS, and/or LCIS at the time of the core biopsy diagnosis, surgical therapy, and/or upon lesion recurrence. After receiving written informed consent from the eligible patients, Sentara Pathology will retrieve the corresponding tissue blocks. The recut tissue sections will be processed at George Mason University, Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine for markers relevant to calcium signaling, Vitamin D response, proliferation, autophagy and inflammation. Combined with the translational research expertise/technology in the Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine at George Mason University, Sentara's diverse patient cohort provides an opportunity to address the most fundamental unanswered questions surrounding the etiology, progression, and therapy of pre-invasive breast lesions.
This open label study investigates a novel non-surgical approach to the treatment of HPV-associated anal intraepithelial neoplasia, using Artesunate suppositories.
This study is a phase II, single arm, controlled, open label internal pilot.
The investigators will expand BSPan's reach and sustainability by systematizing how to enable counties to assume responsibility for one or two of the components while Moncrief/uTSW continues to provide centralized financial review and reimbursement as the Texas BCCS contractor. The investigators will prospectively identify which counties have the necessary program capacity, then test whether implementation of BSPan tailored to a county's capacity and local needs can lead to equivalent program success in an additional 12 rural counties. Findings will be used to develop a model by which BSPan benefits can be brought to rural communities across the country. The investigators will use a readiness assessment criteria (RaC) to gauge county capacity and readiness for BSPan program implementation. The goal of our evaluation is to demonstrate whether a regional decentralized delivery (hub-and-spoke) model can be sustained and increase program reach to underserved rural women. The RaC tool serves two purposes: 1) to determine county capacity and 2) harness program data to facilitate communication during operations between a central BSPan hub and each county partner (spokes). Our evaluation will analyze county training and implementation of BSPan program components, and comprehensive screening processes of the hub and spoke model. The investigators will use county site visits and selected interviews of participants and staff to gain insight into factors at the participant and county levels that facilitate adoption and implementation of comprehensive screening processes, in conjunction with key quantitative metrics and process outcomes. The investigators will apply the Glasgow Re-aiM model to guide our evaluation of BSPan program component implementation in each county. Re-aiM specifies dimensions at the participant and organizational levels. Dimensions are defined as the intervention's: 1) Reach into the target population, 2) effectiveness in modifying risk, 3) adoption by target settings, 4) consistent implementation, and 5) Maintenance of its effects among participants and target settings. our mixed-methods approach will enable focus at both the individual and organizational levels and has been successfully used to assess other similar screening and health promotion programs.
By this non-randomized prospective study, it's evaluated the outcome of patients underwent BCS for DCIS at whom an established score system to address adjuvant therapies have been prospectively applied, according to the wideness of free margins. Between March 2000 and April 2006, 224 patients were enrolled and followed within the study.
The study is an exploratory prospective, single center study with correlative endpoints. The study will investigate the association of tumor cGAS STING signaling with SAbR. Tumor core biopsies will be processed and analyzed as described above. Medical records electronic medical records will be used to collect demographic and medical information and imaging studies.
This randomized phase III trial studies how well oxybutynin chloride works in managing hot flashes in patients who are not candidates for, or not interested in hormone replacement therapy. Previous studies have shown that oxybutynin is effective in managing hot flashes, however doses used in prior studies have resulted in side effects. This trial is evaluating lower doses of oxybutynin with the goal of determining if they are efficacious with less side effects. ADAM-VTE
Patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) treated with available therapies have experienced excellent outcomes and very low mortality rates due to the disease's non-invasive nature. However, considerable debate exists as to how the DCIS lesion should be treated. As a result, determining strategies to manage DCIS has been identified as a research priority. The role of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) for DCIS management is controversial in general and needs further scrutiny. Our study addresses this evidence gap as the investigators propose a retrospective cohort study to investigate the outcome of SLNB among DCIS patients. Specifically, the investigators will compare the outcomes, including survival outcomes and treatment side effects, among women older than 67 years of age with DCIS receiving SLNB vs. not receiving SLNB within 6 months of DCIS diagnosis. The investigators have two primary aims in this study: Aim 1: the investigators select our study sample using SEER-Medicare database. The investigators will determine associations between SLNB and acute/subacute side effects, including lymphedema, pain, and limitation of movement of upper extremity from the first breast conserving surgery to 9 months post-diagnosis. Aim 2: the investigators will determine associations between SLNB and long-term outcomes, including breast cancer specific mortality, ipsilateral invasive breast cancer diagnosis, subsequent mastectomy as treated recurrence, and lasting side effects, from >9 months post-diagnosis to death or the end of this study period. Given the nature of our observational study design, the investigators will apply standard multivariate analyses and propensity score methodology to reduce the influence from confounders. The investigators will control for patient demographics, comorbidities, functional status, tumor characteristics, and prior healthcare utilization. Using distance to the nearest provider that uses SLNB for DCIS or surgeon's tendency in using SLNB for stage I/II breast cancer, the investigators also plan to conduct instrument variable analyses if necessary. Stratifying patients by key DCIS characteristics (including grade, comedonecrosis, and tumor size) and their predicted life expectancy (given their age and comorbidities), the investigators also hope to identify patient subgroups who may safely forgo SLNB. The study would provide evidence on the efficacy and safety outcome of SLNB for DCIS management.
Women who are diagnosed with CIN2 and who have a pregnancy wish are followed up 6 months after the diagnosis with new examinations. The regression rate is based solely on the woman's own ability to clear the cervical lesions. The use of condoms has shown a relatively good protective effect against Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection. It has furthermore been indicated that condoms increase the regression rate of cervical lesions. The hypothesis of this study is that the regression rate of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 (CIN2) increases when condoms are used consistently in the follow-up period of 6 months.