View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial.
Filter by:the goal of this observational study is to describe ovarian cancer epidemiology and characteristics in Syrian women, especially during the war to do more research in the future about the risk factors of ovarian cancer.
The objective of this multicenter randomized controlled trial is to compare a 6-month exercise and nutrition intervention (intervention group, IG) aimed at maintaining or improving physical functioning and quality of life with usual care (control group, CG) in ovarian cancer patients. The main question it aims to answer is: • Can an exercise and nutrition program improve physical performance during and after active treatment for ovarian cancer? Participants of the IG will undergo: - Weeks 1-18: approximately 15-30 minutes of daily exercise (cardio, resistance, and balance exercises); nutritional counseling focusing on malnutrition (protein-energy malnutrition). - Weeks 19-25: More intense daily training; nutritional counseling focusing on the Mediterranean diet. The study design includes 3 survey time points: - Baseline: After surgery and before starting chemotherapy - T1: After chemotherapy (week 19) - T2: After intervention (week 26) The primary outcome is: • 6-minute walk test, 6 months after enrollment (T2)
This study is a multi-center, observational study aiming at developing a machine learning-based early detection model using prospectively collected liquid biopsy samples from newly diagnosed ovarian cancer.
This is a prospective, single-arm, single-center registry study to investigate 6-month progression-free survival with Dalpiciclib, a CDK4/6 kinase inhibitor, plus letrozole in patients with unresectable refractory or resistant recurrent HR-positive, HER2-negative gynecologic solid tumors." Dalpiciclib is a CDK4/6 kinase inhibitor that selectively inhibits the activity of CDK4/6 kinase, so that the complex with Cyclin D cannot phosphorylate the downstream Rb protein and prevent cells from entering the S phase from G1 phase, thereby inhibiting cell proliferation and anti-tumor effects.
The researchers are doing this study to look at the health outcomes of people with advanced ovarian cancer who have a second look laparoscopy (SLL) after they complete their first course of chemotherapy. The researchers will compare the health outcomes of people who have minimal residual disease (MRD-small amounts of cancer cells in the body after a person receives treatment) at the time of SLL with the health outcomes of people who do not have MRD at the time of SLL. The researchers are also doing this study to determine if SLL is safe and practical (feasible) in people with advanced ovarian cancer who have completed the first course of therapy for their disease.
This is a multi-center, open-label, monotherapy dose escalation, PK bridging, and dose expansion Phase I/IIa study in Chinese adult subjects to evaluate the safety, tolerability, Pharmacokinetics (PK) profiles, immunogenicity, and preliminary efficacy of STRO-002 in patients with advanced malignant solid tumors.
This is a single-center, unblinded, prospective observational study, and the objective is to compare the effects of enteral nutrition via nasojejunal tube and parenteral nutrition via vein on patients' early recovery and prognosis who undergo tumor cytoreduction for ovarian cancer.
This phase 1 study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of CUSP06 in patients with platinum-refractory/resistant ovarian cancer and other advanced solid tumors.
A prospective cohort imaging study in a single institution to evaluate 68Ga- FAPI-46 and 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging for detecting recurrent tumor lesions in patients of ovarian cancer with CA125 elevation from complete response after therapy
The association of clinical, pathogenesis and mutational profile of patients affected by ovarian cancer have improved the armamentarium of therapies available for medical doctors. One of most remarkable advancements is represented by the introduction of PARP inhibitors in the front-line setting of advanced ovarian carcinoma. It is necessary to continue with this effort and introduce novel approaches to improve the survival rate as well as predictive biomarkers to approved therapies. Given the absence of predictive biomarkers to standard therapy, patients derived organoid could be a promising platform to test clinically available drugs and/or promising new molecules to explore the tumor sensibility in an ex-vivo model. The aim of this study is to correlate treatment sensibility measured in tumor derived organoids to clinical sensibility seen in real world patients.