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Cervical Cancer clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cervical Cancer.

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NCT ID: NCT04068675 Completed - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Effects of Centering Pre-operative Counseling on Patient Reported Anxiety

Start date: February 24, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the effect of pre-operative counseling in a group setting on patient reported anxiety for patients scheduled to undergo surgery for a known or suspected gynecologic malignancy. Patient reported anxiety will be evaluated using a validated Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) survey. We hypothesize that the group counseling session will reduce patient reported anxiety by a clinical meaningful level. Secondary objectives will evaluate the effect of the intervention on patient reported depression levels and compare adherence to Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) instructions, utilization of unscheduled health care resources, and anxiety/depression levels to historical controls.

NCT ID: NCT04064515 Completed - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

CTCs in Cervix Cancer

Start date: March 2, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study is a validation study to confirm the ability of Telomescan OBP-401 to identify CTCs in patients with HPV 16 / 18 associated cervical cancer. CTCs identified will be tested for the presence of the HPV 16 / 18 E6 protein, confirming a cervical cancer origin.

NCT ID: NCT04061967 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

SMS-based Summons in Cervical Screening

Start date: August 19, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prevention of cervical cancer with cervical screening is one of the most successful screening activities in medicine. In Sweden, screening was implemented in the 1960s and has since prevented tens of thousands of women from having cervical cancer. Individual invitations to screening result in increased attendance therefore evaluating strategies for reaching women through invitations is particularly valuable. Women who regularly attend screening following an invitation reduce their risk of cervical cancer by as much as 90%. Of the women who are diagnosed with cervical cancer (about 550 women per year in Sweden), as many as 38% did not participate in the screening. Invitations for screening are sent to the entire population in Sweden aged 23-70. The current coverage of screening is 82.9%, which represents the proportion of women ages 23-70 who attend according to recommendations. In addition, many women are sporadic attenders who reduce their risk for cancer somewhat. The highest cancer risk is seen among those women who have never participated as well as women who have had a history of precancerous lesions or HPV infection but have not been followed-up. Cervical cancer is the first form of cancer for which there are approved molecular screening tests (HPV test). Unlike the older screening method (cytology), self-collected samples can be analyzed for HPV (the analysis method is so sensitive that it does not matter if the sample is not optimally taken). Invitations and reminders about cervical screening are sent by letter to the woman's home address (about 3 million letters per year in Sweden). This strategy results in a waste of resources and has a negative environmental impact. Regarding reminders, we have seen in previous research that the effect is not optimal. When sending a physical reminder letter to women who have not participated in more than 10 years (current routine), only 2% of the women invited came for sampling. Reminders with SMS are now standard for many businesses in society, such as car testing or dental appointments. It is inexpensive, saves the environment and there are studies that suggest it is more effective than sending physical letters. In this study, we intend to investigate whether SMS reminders, electronic letters, and physical letters for screening lead to increased participation and thus to a higher proportion of detected, treatable precursors of cervical cancer compared to before.

NCT ID: NCT04057924 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

Therapeutic Abstention and Surveillance of Intra-epithelial Histological Lesions of High Grade Cervical CIN2 (Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia Grade 2). SUIVICIN

SUIVICIN
Start date: August 23, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study proposes to describe and evaluate the rate of spontaneous regression of CIN2 at 2 year of follow up in women between 18 and 39 year old. This follow-up is proposed as an alternative to the treatment of reference (conization) with a possible extension to 4 years

NCT ID: NCT04038619 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Treating Immune-Checkpoint Inhibitor Induced-Diarrhea or Colitis in Genitourinary Cancer Patients

Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This trial studies how well fecal microbiota transplantation works in treating diarrhea or colitis (inflammation of the intestines) that is caused by certain types of medications (called immune-checkpoint inhibitors) in patients with genitourinary cancer. Fecal microbiota transplantation may effectively reduce the incidence of immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced diarrhea/colitis.

NCT ID: NCT04028479 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

The Registry of Oncology Outcomes Associated With Testing and Treatment

ROOT
Start date: May 5, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study is to collect and validate regulatory-grade real-world data (RWD) in oncology using the novel, Master Observational Trial construct. This data can be then used in real-world evidence (RWE) generation. It will also create reusable infrastructure to allow creation or affiliation with many additional RWD/RWE efforts both prospective and retrospective in nature.

NCT ID: NCT04022018 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

Study on Adaptive Radiotherapy and Multimodal Information of Cervical Cancer Assisted by Artificial Intelligence

SOARAMIOCC
Start date: December 18, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The standard treatment for non-operative cervical cancer is concurrent external radiation therapy and chemotherapy followed by brachytherapy. During the period of radiotherapy, organ movement and tumor shrinkage may lead to insufficient or excessive radiation dose for the tumor and organs at risk. Adaptive radiotherapy can use images information acquired during treatment as feedback to reduce errors. Total 122 cases of cervical cancer with stage IB2-IVA will be randomly enrolled. Concurrent external volumetric rotational intensity modulated radiotherapy and chemotherapy followed by image-guided adaptive brachytherapy is the treatment strategies of control group patients. Concurrent adaptive external volumetric rotational intensity modulated radiotherapy and chemotherapy followed by image-guided adaptive brachytherapy is the treatment strategies of experimental group patients. CT repositioning will be performed after 15fractions of external radiotherapy, then new target volume will be contoured and new radiotherapy plan will be formulated with the assistance of artificial intelligence program. New radiotherapy plan will be performed from the 17th fraction external radiotherapy. Information on side effects, survival, dosimetry, imaging, clinical features, and cost-effectiveness will be collected. The statistical analysis is as follows, First is the difference in grade 3 side effects between the two groups. Second is 2-year PFS and OS differences between the two groups. Third is relationship between dosimetric differences and prognosis. Fourth one is to analyze the prognostic and predictive factors of adaptive radiotherapy from the patient's clinical characteristics, Positron emission tomography-computed tomography(PET/CT), Magnetic Resonance Imaging(MRI) and other multimodal information. Fifth is cost-benefit analysis of Artificial Intelligence(AI).

NCT ID: NCT04017377 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

VMAT Concurrent Cisplatin Plus Nab-paclitaxel for Local Advanced Cervical Cancer

Start date: September 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a single arm, open-lable Phase I clinical trial. Eligible patients will have Histologically proven stage IB2-IVA cervical cancer. We hypothesize that Nab-paclitaxel in combination with cisplatin and radiotherapy may have anti-tumor activity in patients with cervical cancer. Nab-paclitaxel has not previously been combined with conventional RT-CT to treat cervical cancer.

NCT ID: NCT04016389 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

FIGO 2018 Stage IB2 Cervical Cancer Treated With Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Followed by Fertility Sparing Surgery

CoNteSSa
Start date: February 11, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will include patients with invasive cervical cancer that wish to keep their fertility as much as possible in the future after treatment. Patients who receive surgery alone may experience long-term side effects including infertility. The purpose of this research study is to determine whether giving neo-adjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery can maintain fertility in patients with invasive cervical cancer. The neo-adjuvant chemotherapy will consist of a platinum-based chemotherapy drug cisplatin or carboplatin, with a chemotherapy drug called paclitaxel. These are common chemotherapy drugs used in the treatment of women with cervical cancers.

NCT ID: NCT04016142 Active, not recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

Carboplatin-Paclitaxel Adjuvant Chemotherapy in the Treatment of Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer

ACCRAPAN
Start date: July 15, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a mutlicentric, open-label non-randomized, national, 2-stage phase II trial to assess efficacy and safety of a weekly Carboplatin-Paclitaxel adjuvant chemotherapy after intensity modulated extended-field chemoradiation in patient suffering from of locally advanced cervical cancer with para-aortic positive nodes.