View clinical trials related to Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:While there has been a significant increase in the uptake of antiretroviral therapy among women living with HIV (WLHIV) in many low- and-middle income countries (LMICs), the coverage of cervical cancer screening and treatment (CCST) among WLHIV remains low. This study aims to leverage the available infrastructure for HIV care and treatment programs in Nigeria to integrate cervical cancer screening and treatment and conduct a cluster randomized, hybrid type III trial design to assess the comparative effectiveness of a Core set of implementation strategies versus a Core+ (enhanced) set of implementation strategies to implement cervical cancer screening, onsite treatment, referral and referral completion, treatment, and retention in care among WLHIV. The overarching goal is to improve the health and life expectancy of WLHIV with co-occurring cervical cancer.
Phase II study: a study to explore the safety and preliminary efficacy of BAT1308 combined with platinum-based chemotherapy ± Bevacizumab Phase III study: a confirmatory study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of BAT1308 combined with platinum-based chemotherapy ± Bevacizumab as first-line therapy for PD-L1-positive (CPS ≥ 1) persistent, recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer
To detect the expression of AUNIP in cervical cancer serum, and to clarify its diagnostic and prognostic value.
The goal of this non-randomised trial is to test how a workshop that includes religiously-tailored messages can help increase the uptake of breast, colorectal and cervical cancer screening among Muslim women in North East England and Scotland. The results of this trial will inform the development of a full-scale randomised-controlled trial. Participants in this study will be asked to take part in a two-hour workshop, deliver either online or in-person.
This study aims to help to screen out appropriate cases for consolidation therapy and more intensive follow up.
This is a multi-center study in patients with recurrent or metastatic HPV16-positive, PD-L1 positive cervical cancer who has progressed during or after treatment with the first-line standard of care (pembrolizumab with chemotherapy with/without bevacizumab). The trial is designed to investigate VB10.16 alone or in combination with the immune checkpoint inhibitor, atezolizumab. The trial consist of 2 parts: the first part which investigates VB10.16 + placebo versus VB10.16 + atezolizumab. Approximately 30 patients will be included in each group. The goal of this part is to evaluate which of the two treatments is the best. The second part of the study will select the best treatment from part 1 and investigate the safety and efficacy of additional 70 patients.
Urinary retention is one of the most common complications of radical hysterectomy in patients with cervical cancer, with an incidence of 26-53% depending on the diagnostic criteria. The most common method to prevent urinary retention after radical hysterectomy is continuous catheterization, but up to 14.5% of patients need continuous catheterization for more than 4 weeks, because catheterization is an invasive procedure, increasing the risk of urinary tract infection, and long-term postoperative retention of urinary catheter caused by edema of the vesicourethral sphincter and urethral glands. Obstruction of bladder outlet caused by increased urethral outflow resistance may also lead to postoperative urinary retention, thus forming a vicious cycle and aggravating urinary retention. In our previous retrospective analysis, it was confirmed that acupuncture and moxibustion were effective in restoring bladder function after radical hysterectomy. Compared with the control group, the incidence of urinary retention in patients receiving acupuncture and moxibustion was reduced from 44.17% to 24.17%, and no serious adverse reactions occurred, and the patients had good tolerance. We plan to conduct further randomized controlled studies to confirm this.
The ITHACA study is a phase I study evaluating the safety and toxicity of a peritumorally injected PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor, in combination with a multifunctional CTLA-4 inhibitor, in early-stage cervical cancer.
To explore the efficacy of incorporating neoadjuvant immunotherapy into neoadjuvant chemotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer patients with high risk of recurrence.
[18 F]fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography-magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MRI) is a new hybrid imaging tool that has recently arrived in oncology, and is particularly promising. Its usefulness seems obvious in certain tumor types, but its place in the staging of cervical cancers has never been explored in a prospective trial to our knowledge. Previously, a comparative retrospective study from 2009 found a better sensitivity of PET fused to diagnostic MRI images compared to PET/CT (positron emission tomography/computed tomography) in the detection of metastatic lymph nodes (54 and 44% respectively). It was an a posteriori fusion of images, from images acquired by PET-CT.