View clinical trials related to Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:The investigators aim to develop an advanced imaging platform, such as dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) 13C-MRI, MR fingerprinting (MRF) and MR Relaxometry, which combines with traditional anatomical contrast CT, MRI and PET, and integrate blood/urine metabolomics methods. A comprehensive strategy to thoroughly analyze the immune activation of spleen pattern, microstructure, cell density, red blood cell iron content, immune cell glycolysis and metabolic flow rate.
The percentages of participants in clinical studies haven't always been perfectly representative of a particular group. This research examines the variables that affect a patient's choice to enroll in, discontinue participation in, or resume participation in a clinical trial for cervical cancer. It will also try to analyze data from the perspective of different demographic groups to check for recurring trends which might yield insights for the sake of future cervical cancer studies.
A single center, open, single arm dose escalation phase I study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of HRYZ-T101 TCR-T cell for HPV18 positive advanced solid tumor. The study will investigate DLT of HRYZ-T101 TCR-T cell injection.
This study assesses topics as Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), and cancer screening methods. The focus will be on evaluating feasibility of implementing novel cancer screening modalities in a low-resource setting in Guinea-Bissau and further to estimate the prevalence of the precancerous virus HPV amongst women living with HIV. In the study the investigators will collect urinary and vaginal self-samples for HPV testing, and further evaluate the feasibility of implementing the devices as screening modalities through questionnaires given to the women.
This trial will evaluate the possible benefits and the performance of liquid biopsies in HPV-associated cancer treatment monitoring. This study aims to find a combination of an adequately sensitive and specific sampling method and biomarkers for early risk stratification of disease recurrence.
This study hypothesizes that patients who persist with cell-free human papillomavirus deoxyribonucleic acid (cfHPV-DNA) plasma expression at the end of standard treatment, can derive the benefit of using adjuvant chemotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer (CC). After standard treatment based on concomitant chemoradiotherapy regime, a qualitative and quantitative research of cfHPV-DNA in plasma of patients will be conducted. Those with a negative qualitative research result will leave the study. Patients who have positive research for plasma 16/18 cfHPV-DNA at the end of chemoradiotherapy treatment will be randomized to receive two additional cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy or observation. Patients will be followed with conduction of computed tomography (CT) scan of the thorax and magnetic resonance (MRI) of abdomen and pelvis and clinical and gynecological examination at every four months.
This is a single institution, multi-center, Phase II, single-arm study, using Whole Pelvis (WP) Pencil Beam Scanning Proton Radiation (PBS PRT) in the post-surgical, adjuvant setting for definitive treatment of gynecologic cancers. The purpose of this study is to estimate rate of acute clinician-reported gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity using WP PBS PRT in the definitive treatment of gynecologic cancers in the post-surgical, adjuvant setting.
This is a single-center single-arm study. The main purpose of this study is to study the efficacy of surgical treatment for patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (FIGO IB3, IIA2-IVA) who still have residual tumor after concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
The primary purpose of the study is to determine which of four components (symptom-burden tailored app, exercise partner, oncology provider engagement, coaching) added to a core intervention of a wearable activity tracker and commercially available app, will improve physical activity. The findings will generate meaningful knowledge about how to best increase physical activity in older gynecologic cancer patients receiving systemic cancer therapies to improve quality of life and cancer-specific survival.
This research study aims to develop a stigma-responsive educational intervention which includes simplified scripts that provide clear messages about HPV and video aimed at addressing fears and misperceptions from a peer perspective. These educational components will be incorporated into 'Elimisha' HPV a multi-level stigma-responsive cervical cancer prevention service delivery model.