View clinical trials related to Endometrial Cancer.
Filter by:This protocol tests de-escalated adjuvant treatment in patients with POLE-mutated or p53wt/NSMP (p53 wildtype/no specific molecular profile) early-stage endometrial cancer (EC). Patients may be enrolled in one of two sub-studies - EN10.A/RAINBO BLUE: POLE-mutated EC - EN10.B/TAPER: p53 wildtype / NSMP EC
The purposes of current study were to explore the relationship between cervical cancer/endometrial cancer and demographic information, behavior and life style, pregnancy-related factors, and disease history, and to study the factors affecting the prognosis of cancers. In addition, omics tests were performed on the biological specimens to identify the diagnostic markers and prognostic biomarkers.
This Phase II, global, single-arm study is designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of giredestrant monotherapy in participants with Grade 1 endometrioid endometrial cancer.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of selinexor as a maintenance treatment in patients with p53 wt endometrial carcinoma (EC), who have achieved a partial response (PR) or complete response (CR) (per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1 [RECIST v 1.1]) after completing at least 12 weeks of platinum-based therapy. A total of 220 participants will be enrolled in the study and randomized in a 1:1 ratio to maintenance therapy with either selinexor or placebo.
In a transvaginal tru-cut biopsy, guided by ultrasound, a needle is inserted through the vaginal wall into a pelvic lesion and a few pieces of tissue are obtained for examination. This clinical trial is organized to evaluate the safety and efficacy of transvaginal tru-cut biopsy in a large group of patients with tumors in the small pelvis.
This is a pilot/feasibility study to conduct genetic testing using tumor/blood samples of African American and Caucasian patients with ovarian and endometrial cancer following surgery at AU Health Medical Center. The aim of the pilot/feasibility study is to sequence a panel of cancer genes on paired tumor/blood (germline) samples of patients with ovarian and endometrial tumors at a two-week time point following surgery at AU Medical Center. While paired testing of tumor and blood (germline) provides direct clinical value to patients, investigators propose to study whether investigators can define and overcome such minority barriers among the Georgia Cancer Center (GCC)/AU Health Medical Center (AUMC) patient population.
This study will test the safety, including side effects, and determine the characteristics of a drug called PRO1184 in participants with solid tumors. Participants will have solid tumor cancer that has spread through the body (metastatic) or cannot be removed with surgery (unresectable).
This is an open-label, non-randomized, Phase 1b/2 study to determine the safety and tolerability of NC410 when combined with a standard dose of pembrolizumab. This study will also assess the clinical benefit of combination therapy in participants with advanced unresectable and/or metastatic ICI refractory solid tumors OR ICI naïve MSS/MSI-low solid tumors
Immunotherapy has gained a significant amount of attention recently, but its efficacy as a single agent in gynecological cancers has been disappointing. Pre-clinical evidence supports the combination of using Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors (VEGF) inhibitors with immunotherapy. VEGF inhibitors suppress the activation of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) and VEGF has been shown to affect the functional maturation of dendritic cells; therefore, VEGF inhibitors could improve the function of antigen presentation. In this study, Cabozantinib (VEGF inhibitor) and Dostarlimab (immunotherapeutic drug) will be admnistered as a combination to patients with recurrent gynecologic carcinosarcoma.
Patients with advanced mismatch repair-deficient (MMRd) or microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) endometrial cancer (EC) are currently treated as one entity, and immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) monotherapy is the treatment of choice. However, different molecular mechanisms drive the development of dMMR/MSI-H tumors, including germline mutations in canonical MMR genes (Lynch syndrome), somatically acquired MMR gene mutations (Lynch-like), and homozygous methylation of the MLH1 gene promoter (sporadic). There is increasing evidence that patients with sporadic MMRd EC have a worse response to ICI monotherapy than those with Lynch/Lynch-like tumors. Antiangiogenic therapy can relieve immunosuppression through blood vessel normalization and the oxygen metabolism pathway, thereby having a synergistic effect with ICIs. Anlotinib is an oral anti-angiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). Camrelizumab is a fully humanized, high-affinity monoclonal antibody against PD-1. The purpose of this trial is to assess the efficacy and safety and tolerability of anlotinib plus camrelizumab in recurrent EC patients with sporadic MMRd tumors.