View clinical trials related to Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:The Pocket colposcope has 510k FDA clearance and has been successfully used in almost 1500 unique patients globally in Duke and non-Duke protocols to date. 400 women who are HPV-positive and planned to undergo treatment at 6 Ministry of Health-supported outpatient clinics in Kisumu County will be recruited to the study. After providing informed consent, participants will be randomized 1:1 to either standard-of-care visual inspection or colposcopy with the Pocket Colposcope
The objective of the trial is to evaluate if adjuvant (chemo)radiation is associated with a disease-free survival benefit after radical surgery in patients with intermediate risk cervical cancer. The primary endpoint of the study is the disease-free survival from the day of randomisation. A total of 514 patients are required to achieve 80% power on 5% significance level with non-inferiority margin of 5% to test the difference between the ARMs using Cox proportional hazards model. The maximal tolerated margin for non-inferiority in 2-year DFS is 5% (including expected drop-out rate of 10%).
This is A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Phase III Study to Evaluate AK104 Plus Platinum-containing Chemotherapy With or Without Bevacizumab as First-line Treatment for Persistent, Recurrent, or Metastatic Cervical Cancer
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and therapeutic activity of GI-101/GI-101A as a single agent or in combination with pembrolizumab, lenvatinib or local radiotherapy (RT) over a range of advanced and/or metastatic solid tumors.
In this single-arm study, patient with cervical cancer who had recurrence of the pelvic wall after surgery ± Abdominal aortic lymph node metastasis will be included to evaluate the efficacy and safety of camrelizumab combined with concurrent chemoradiation and subsequent maintenance therapy
Most uterine cervical high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are transient, with only a small fraction developing into cervical cancer. Family aggregation studies and heritability estimates suggest a significant inherited genetic component. Candidate gene studies and previous genome-wide association studies (GWASs) report associations between the HLA region and cervical cancer. Adopting a genome-wide approach, we aimed to establish an early warning model for a high-risk population of cervical cancer.
Para-aortic lymph node metastasis is a poor prognostic factor for locally advanced cervical cancer, but false negative diagnosis is easy to occur. The aim of this trial was to investigate whether para-aortic prophylactic radiotherapy improves disease-free survival in patients with positive pelvic lymph nodes below the common iliac artery.
This is a single-arm, multicenter, phase II study to investigate efficacy and safety of Toripalimab combined with chemotherapy (paclitaxel and cisplatin) and Bevacizumab as first-line treatment in patients with recurrent, refractory and metastatic cervical cancer
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the durability of protection of Recombinant Human Papillomavirus Bivalent (Types 16,18) Vaccine administered in females aged 18-45 years.
In this single armed, single-center, case-controlled study, the investigators will conduct a prospective trial and integrate the most advanced imaging technology to medical practice, attempting to solve the problem detected by radiomics approach. The investigators plan a 3-year project with non-randomized, single group assignment observational study design. Thirty participants with diagnosed LACC that are to receive CCRT are to be recruited for this prospective single institutional study from Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou (CGMH). Standard-of-care MRI/CT that is required for staging will be the first line screening method. A tumor biopsy and routine blood test will be obtained at the time of the initial clinic visit. Participants eligible for this study will receive two investigative exams-MRF, CEST, DNP-MRI MRI and Metabolomics, at baseline and the 2-week during CCRT. The new imaging methods being tested are MRF and CEST without contrast enhancement, and DNP-MRI which provides quantitative measurement of the metabolism occurring within cancer cells. It also involves injection of a contrast agent-Hyperpolarized pyruvate (13C) Injection. The participants will be injected with the study drug at a dose of 0.43 ml/kg and then receive MRI scan.