View clinical trials related to Endometrial Cancer.
Filter by:In order to develop a convenient, cheap and comprehensive method to preoperatively predict dMMR and reduce the number of people requiring dMMR-related immunohistochemical or genetic testing after surgery, this study aims to establish a deep learning model based on MRI to predict the MMR status of endometrial cancer. Patients diagnosed with endometrial cancer after surgery and who had completed pelvic MRI before surgery were collected. Deep learning was used to combine the clinical model with MR Image data to build the model. ROC curves were constructed for the testing group, internal verification group and external verification group, and the area under ROC curves were calculated to evaluate the diagnostic effect and stability of the model. The dual threshold triage strategy was used to screen out the pMMR population (below the lower threshold), dMMR population (above the upper threshold) and the uncertain part of the population (between the thresholds).
To learn if the combination of DKN-01 and pembrolizumab can help to control advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer.
The goal of this observational study is to clarify the significance of TB, PDC, DR, MELF, and immunohistochemical expression of those infiltrative patterns in patients with endometrial carcinomas (EC). The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. What is the relationship between TB, PDC, DR, MELF, and other clinicopathological features of patients with endometrial carcinomas (EC)? 2. What is the association of TB, PDC, DR, and MELF patterns with disease-free survival and overall survival? 3. Will the evaluation of the immunohistochemical expression of P53 in the TB, PDC, DR, and MELF patterns be important?
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.
The aim of the study is to investigate the association between early non-compliance to ERAS in postoperative day 2 (POD2) with the rate of postoperative complications.
The study aims to determine whether next generation sequencing and microsatellite analysis of cervical cytology is sensitive for the detection of endometrial carcinoma.
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare physical activity outcomes between endometrial cancer survivors randomized to 1 of 3 conditions: 1) usual care, 2) FitEx, 3) FitEx+yoga. Survivors randomized to FitEx groups will recruit ~3 support team members to complete the intervention with them. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - Do FitEx groups undertake more physical activity than the usual care group? - Are there differences in quality of life, self-compassion, flourishing, self-efficacy, social support, habit formation, and fruit /vegetable consumption Participants will: - Wear a Fitbit - Complete surveys - Participate in 30 minute weekly virtual meetings (FitEx groups only) - Receive weekly newsletters (FitEx groups only)
This is a multicenter, retrospective, observational (non-interventional) study, in patients treated in a real-world setting within the Spanish dostarlimab EAP. The study is planned to be conducted in the Medical Oncology departments at 50-60 Spanish GEICO-associated hospitals. Its multicenter nature aims to improve the representativeness of the study population in Spain. The study would include approximately 110 patients with dMMR/MSI-H recurrent or advanced EC, that have progressed on or following prior treatment with a platinum containing regimen, treated within the dostarlimab EAP, available in Spain from January 2021 to September 2022. The total number of participating centers and patients will be confirmed once the EAP is closed. Patient's medical records will be screened by local clinical staff to assess for eligibility according to selection criteria. The study comprises a single study visit, in which the patient will give her informed consent to participate (when the patient is alive) and the physician will extract the study data from the patient's medical charts. Alive patients who fulfill inclusion criteria and meet no exclusion criteria will be informed by a member of their care team about the purpose of the study, as well as about potential risks and benefits of study participation. The written informed consent form (ICF) should be signed prior to study initiation in alive patients in order to access their medical records. Deceased patients will be still included but their relatives will not be contacted. In these instances, data will be collected by members of the direct care team, unless there is a prior express order from the patient to preserve confidentiality. All eligible deceased and consenting living patients at the participating centers will be included. Data will be directly retrieved from hospital medical records and reported in the electronic Case Report Form (eCRF).
This is a prospective observational multicentric study. The aim is to evaluate the incidence of endometrial cancer and endometrial atypical hyperplasia in patients with previous breast cancer, treated with different adjuvant therapies. The second aim is to identify ultrasonographic soft markers related with endometrial cancer or atipycal hyperplasia.
This study is an open-label, multi-arm, parallel cohort, dose validation and expansion design. The study is modular in design, allowing evaluation of the safety, efficacy and pharmacokinetics (PK) of NUC-3373 in combination with other agents for the treatment of patients with different tumour types. Each module is designed to evaluate a different NUC-3373 combination and consists of a dose-validation phase (Phase Ib) and a dose-expansion phase (Phase II). Phase Ib of each module will determine the safety and tolerability of the combinations for further clinical evaluation in Phase II. Approximately 6-20 evaluable patients will be enrolled in the Phase Ib stage of each module to determine safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of NUC-3373 in combination with other agents. Each module will then move into Phase II to enable a further assessment of safety and efficacy in approximately 20-40 patients. Module 1 will assess NUC-3373 + leucovorin (LV) in combination with pembrolizumab for the treatment of patients with advanced/metastatic solid tumours who have progressed on ≤2 prior therapies for metastatic disease, that may have included 1 prior immunotherapy-containing regimen (either monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy) or who have not progressed but where addition of NUC-3373 + LV to standard pembrolizumab monotherapy may be appropriate (e.g., patients who could not tolerate post- immuno-oncology (IO) standard of care therapy). Module 2 will assess NUC-3373 + LV in combination with docetaxel for the treatment of patients with advanced/metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or pleural mesothelioma who have progressed on, or were unable to tolerate, 1 or 2 prior lines of cytotoxic chemotherapy-containing regimens for advanced/metastatic disease. The opening of each module will be at the discretion of the Sponsor. Further modules may be added as non-clinical and clinical data become available to support additional NUC-3373 combinations and tumour types.