View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial.
Filter by:Clinical trials, with a particular focus on recurrent ovarian cancer, play a crucial role in assessing the safety and efficacy of novel treatments for this condition. These trials serve as essential tools to determine whether new medications outperform traditional therapies, providing substantial evidence to support their widespread adoption. By actively participating in recurrent ovarian cancer observational study serves pivotal role in expanding the boundaries of medical knowledge and advancing the quality of care provided to those enduring the same condition.
EXCYTE-1 is a multicentre, prospective observational study to investigate the relationship between ex vivo drug response (EVDR), measured in ovarian tumour-derived samples using high content imaging, and actual patient clinical response. Patients with newly diagnosed or relapsed/refractory epithelial ovarian carcinoma, that present with malignant effusions (ascites or pleural effusions), will be enrolled in the study before starting their initial or next treatment line. Enrolled patients will be asked to provide ascites, peripheral blood and fresh tumour tissue if available. Samples will be shipped to the sponsor laboratory and their response to standard of care drugs evaluated ex vivo. Participants will: - provide samples during routine clinical procedures - agree that data about their medical history, diagnosis and health status at the following timepoints are collected: at signature of the consent form, at the time samples are provided, at start of the therapy, upon completion of the therapy, regularly after completion of the therapy
The goal of this interventional clinical trial is to learn about TNG348, a ubiquitin specific peptidase 1 (USP1) inhibitor, alone and in combination with olaparib in patients with BRCA 1/2 mutant or HRD+ solid tumors. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - to evaluate the safety and tolerability of single agent and combination therapy - to determine the recommended dose for Phase 2 of single agent and combination therapy - to determine the pharmacokinetics of TNG348 as a single agent and in combination therapy - to evaluate the initial antineoplastic activity as a single agent and in combination therapy Participants will receive study treatment until they experience an undesirable side effect, their disease progresses or until they withdraw consent.
This is an open-label, multi-center Phase II study of fluzoparib combined with bevacizumab for maintenance therapy after first-line platinum-containing chemotherapy in patients with BRCA wild-type advanced ovarian cancer. The primary objective is to evaluate median progression free survival of fluzoparib plus bevacizumab.
A phase Ib/II clinical study on the safety, pharmacokinetic characteristics, and preliminary efficacy of SC0191 combination chemotherapy in patients with advanced ovarian cancer.
This prospective, non-interventional study is designed to evaluate the quality of life of Chinese ovarian cancer patients with long-term niraparib use in a real-world setting. Participants will complete questionnaires or accept telephone follow-up to provide information about their quality of life.
To develop a shared decision-making (SDM) tool to help Spanish-speaking patients make decisions about their maintenance therapy
Non-profit, multicenter, prospective, observational study. This study aims to evaluate whether the articulated treatment algorithm that is now possible for OC patients does produce tangible changes of financial distress over the time and whether the determinants of financial distress change their relative weight over the time.
This is a non-randomized Phase 2 study of sacituzumab govitecan (IMMU-132) in subjects with recurrent or persistent platinum-resistant epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancers.
Patients who receive satisfactory PDS, currently the change in CA125 during chemotherapy can only be used to evaluate the effectiveness of chemotherapy. This study plans to use ctDNA dynamic monitoring to detect minimal residual lesions during treatment, to demonstrate the application value of ctDNA dynamic monitoring in predicting the recurrence of ovarian cancer after PDS/IDS surgery.