View clinical trials related to Endometrial Neoplasms.
Filter by:The study will investigate the effect of niraparib on tumor tissue in chemotherapy naïve, newly diagnosed, high-grade endometrial cancer patients. Biomarkers of cognate molecular pathways as well as investigational assays will be used to study the antineoplastic effect of the drug.
Endometrial tissue is a hormonal-dependent tissue in both pre- and postmenopausal period. The endometrial cells are expressing receptors for all sex hormones, mainly for estrogen, progesterone and androgens. The proper response of the endometrial cells on hormones is crucial for a well-balanced fluctuation of endometrial tissue. If, for any reason, these responses are altered, this may lead to benign or malignant lesions. The androgens, through their receptors, decrease the proliferation of the endometrial cells. After menopause, the number of androgens receptors (ARs) increases in proportion to estrogen receptors and this may lead to endometrial atrophy. If the functionality of ARs is decreased, the effect of estrogen increases and this may possibly lead to endometrial hyperplasia or to endometrial cancer. The AR gene is located on the X chromosome and consists of 8 exons. Genetic research has shown that on exon 1, there is an area of trinucleotide Cytosine- Adenosine- Guanin (CAG) repeats which controls the functionality of the receptor. The more CAG repeats, the less responsive the receptor. The goal of this research is to study the AR gene polymorphism and particularly the number of CAG repeats on exon 1, in patients with known endometrial pathology (benign and malignant). The results will be compared with a random sample of the general population without endometrial pathology.
A clinical trial to evaluate TQB2858 injection combined with Anlotinib Hydrochloride capsule in the treatment of recurrent or metastatic advanced endometrial carcinoma
This is a Phase 2 trial Safety Lead-in trial conducted in 3 cohorts of patients. A safety lead-in study of the impact of adding the Repurposed Drugs a third agent will be conducted prior to opening enrollment into the compassionate use study. All patients enrolled in the safety lead-in study may continue long-term treatment under this protocol without interruption of dosing.
This is a Phase 3, multicenter, randomized, open-label trial to evaluate whether EG-007 plus Len+Pem is superior to Len+Pem alone in patients with advanced endometrial cancer (Stage III or IV). This trial will be preceded by a safety lead-in study with up to 28 patients (the safety lead-in is a separate, free-standing protocol). Approximately 450 patients will be randomized equally (1:1) to receive EG-007 plus Len+Pem or Len+Pem alone. The randomization will be stratified by the following stratification factors: - Diagnosis Classification (advanced Stage III/IV vs. recurrent endometrial cancer) - ECOG score at baseline (0 vs 1) - Geographic region (Asia vs ROW)
1. To assess the value of 18F-FDG PET/CT in the initial staging and detection of recurrent cases of endometrial cancer. 2. To determine correlation between PET/CT derived parameters including SUVmax, TLG and MTV and clinic-pathological patient characteristics. 3. To detect local and distant recurrence after therapy.
Endometrial cancer incidence rates were increasing in the past two decades with a continuous rising trend in Taiwan. Uterine cancer was attributable to obesity based on their association with excess body weight in most epidemiological cohort studies. However, the prevalence of obesity was lower in Taiwan.Therefore, we will study if adipose tissues depots in different locations of body could reflect or correlate the pathogenesis of endometrial cancer.
1. This is a multi-center clinical study to evaluate dual mTORC1/2 inhibitor (ATG 008) or selective inhibitor of nuclear export compound (ATG-010) in combination with chemotherapy in patients with relapsed or metastatic ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, and cervical cancer.
According to ESGO-ESTRO-ESMO guidelines, pelvic Sentinel lymph node detection is suitable for lymph node staging in endometrial carcinoma of the uteri. Nonetheless, a learning curve is mandatory to ensure the surgical quality of the sampling. The aim of the study is to assess the success of sentinel lymph node detection according to SHREC-Trial surgical strategy.
To compare the effect of vaginal brachytherapy as adjuvant treatment after operation when compared to pelvic external beam radiotherapy in patients with early endometrial cancer based on moderate risk molecules classification.