View clinical trials related to Early-Stage Breast Carcinoma.
Filter by:This phase II trial studies how well anastrozole and letrozole after surgery work in treating patients with stage I-III breast cancer. Drugs, such as anastrozole and letrozole, may stop the growth of tumor cells by decreasing the amount of estrogen made by the body. Giving anastrozole and letrozole after surgery may prevent breast cancer from coming back (recurrence).
This phase I trial studies how well chemokine modulation therapy and standard chemotherapy given before surgery work in treating patients with early stage triple negative breast cancer. Chemokine modulation therapy, including celecoxib, recombinant interferon alfa-2b, and rintatolimod, may stimulate the immune system and stop tumor cells from growing. Drugs used in standard chemotherapy, such as paclitaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Giving chemokine modulation therapy together with standard chemotherapy may work better than giving either therapy alone in treating patients with triple negative breast cancer.
The investigators will compare the operated patients for a beginning breast cancer in the Hypnose arm and the patient in the classical general anesthesia arm. It is a Observational study as we cannot randomized patient, (they need to be compliant with Hypnose). Patient will be informed that some parameters, about his recovery, will be collected from their medical file. They will not have another particular treatment because they are in the study. It is just a prospective data collection. The patient will be compared on several items after the surgery ( as pain and pain killer intake, the heal process of the scar, etc...) Also the investigators will compare the impact of hypnose on the other treatments the patient received. The investigators need approximately 150 patients (Half in each arm).
Prospective, randomized, open label, two arms,, phase 0 clinical trial. HER2-negative breast cancer patients recently diagnosed will be screened for trial participation. A biopsy will be scheduled the week prior to or the same day as the FDG PET. Paraffin-embedded tumor samples will be used to evaluate the stainings of Ki67, cleaved caspase-3 and microvessels, and frozen tumor samples will be used to evaluate SDH staining. The FDG-PET will be followed by the bevacizumab dose (15 mg/kg IV, single dose). After one week, the PET will be repeated in order to detect the patients that have experienced FDG uptake decay. Right after, treatment with ME-344 (arm 1) or no treatment (arm 2) will start. ME-344 will be administered at 10 mg/kg on day 8, 15 and 22. Surgery will be performed on day 28 (thus, 4 weeks after the bevacizumab dose, which is considered a safe window for antiangiogenics). Fragments of the surgical specimen will be collected. Paraffin-embedded tumor sample will be used to repeat (and compare) the stainings of Ki67, cleaved caspase-3 and microvessels, and frozen tumor sample will be used to repeat (and compare) SDH staining. Patients will come off trial in case of consent withdrawal, unequivocal disease progression is observed, unacceptable toxicity occurs, or in case of intercurrent disease or any other condition deemed incompatible with continuation in the clinical trial by the investigator.
Sentinel node biopsy is a well established tool for axillary staging in early breast cancer. So far the impact of a preoperative lymph node scintigraphy is unclear. This study aims to clarify whether a preoperative lymphoscintigraphy is of additional benefit in a prospective randomized multicenter study design.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the biological effects of abemaciclib in combination with anastrozole and compare those to the effects of abemaciclib alone and anastrozole alone in the tumors of postmenopausal women with hormone receptor positive (HR+), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) negative breast cancer.
This project which is fully funded by the European Union FP7 Program is designed to pull together all the information we obtain from scans and x-rays to design a personalised 3-D digital model of each patient, their anatomy and disease. We can then use this as follows: as (i) an aid to surgical planning to enable objective clinical decision making (ii) a decision support tool to communicate the available treatment options to the patient and facilitate shared decision making and provision of personalised care and (iii) to enable standardised objective evaluation of the aesthetic outcome of the treatment procedures. This study aims to demonstrate the ability of the Virtual Physiological Human concept to empower breast cancer patients and assess the impact on their care and quality of life.
This study is being done to evaluate the potential benefits of using acupuncture to reduce symptoms of tingling, burning, numbness and pain in the hands and feet of women with peripheral neuropathy after completion of chemotherapy for breast cancer.