View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial.
Filter by:Ovarian cancer is a highly lethal gynecological malignancy, often diagnosed at an advanced stage, with high rates of recurrence within 1-2 years after frontline treatment. Current guidelines recommend monitoring tumor markers CA125 and HE4 for disease progression, but these markers may not detect recurrence or disease progression when their levels are below the detection limit. Therefore, there is a need to identify new prognostic biomarkers and monitor their dynamic changes for effective risk stratification and personalized treatment in patients with ovarian cancer
A cohort establishment study of total management of ovarian cancer (including fallopian tube cancer and primary peritoneal cancer).
PREDAtOOR is a pilot study and this study aims at improving the selection of the best treatment strategy for patients with advanced ovarian cancer by using Camera Vision (CV) to predict outcomes of cyto reduction at the time of Diagnostic laparoscopy.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, phase II clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of IN10018 in combination with PLD vs. placebo in combination with PLD in subjects with platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer (including fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancers).
HS-20089 is an investigational antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) composed of a humanized IgG1 anti-B7-H4 monoclonal antibody conjugated to the topoisomerase I inhibitor payload via a protease-cleavable linker, with an average drug-to-antibody ratio of about 6. This is a phase 2, open-label, multi-center study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics (PK) and immunogenicity of HS-20089 as monotherapy in patients with recurrent or metastatic ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cyclophosphamide and bevacizumab in combination with Envafolimab in the treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), fallopian tube cancer, and primary peritoneal cancer.
The purpose of this study is to help test an idea designed to foster more supportive talk between providers (doctors or nurse practitioners), patients, and caregivers during an outpatient oncology appointment. A caregiver is the person the patient identifies is primarily involved in their healthcare. This study is collecting your reaction to this idea in order to understand needed changes before we introduce the idea to a larger group of patients.
In this study, we hypothesize that calculating the ROMA score (CA125 + HE4 blood marker assay) will enable faster, more targeted diagnosis and management of epithelial ovarian cancer recurrence than the CA125 marker assay alone. This early identification of recurrence would then improve patients' quality of life, since it would increase the chances of benefiting from less invasive and less morbid surgery. It would also reduce the cost of patient management following disease progression. If our hypothesis is confirmed, the results of this study will enable us to update the recommendations for post-treatment follow-up of patients in remission from epithelial ovarian cancer, as well as reimbursing the HE4 marker assay (and thus the calculation of the ROMA score).
SOPRANO is a multi-centre, randomised phase II trial which aims to assess the impact of Stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT) and continuing treatment with a PARP inhibitor (PARPi) for patients with oligometastatic or oligoprogressive ovarian, fallopian tube and primary peritoneal carcinoma. SOPRANO will also establish the feasibility and acceptability of delivering SBRT in this setting.
This is a single center prospective observational study to characterize the immune landscape of newly diagnosed epithelial ovarian cancer (OC). Patients with newly diagnosed epithelial OC will be enrolled in 4 different cohorts: A) Newly diagnosed high grade serous or endometroid OC undergoing primary debulking surgery; B) Newly diagnosed high grade serous or endometroid OC undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) followed by interval debulking surgery; C) Rare subtypes of epithelial OC (low grade serous, low grade endometrioid, clear cell, mucinous or carcinosarcoma) undergoing primary debulking surgery; D) Rare subtypes of epithelial OC (low grade serous, low grade endometrioid, clear cell, mucinous or carcinosarcoma) undergoing NACT followed by interval debulking surgery. A cohort of women undergoing adnexectomy for benign pathology will be enrolled (cohort E) for comparative analysis. Enrolled patients will be asked to provide the following biological samples at specified time points: archival and fresh tumor tissue, peripheral blood samples, rectal and vaginal swabs, ascites (when present). The main aim of the study is to characterize the immune landscape of epithelial OC in tumor tissue and peripheral blood and correlate the presence of myeloid-derived suppressive cells (MDSCs) and other immune infiltrates and of the systemic immune response with progression free interval (PFI) in epithelial OC.