View clinical trials related to Fallopian Tube Cancer.
Filter by:To maximise the accessibility and benefit of PARP inhibitors to eligible patients, it is essential to know the prevalence of HRD in women with advanced high-grade serous or endometrioid ovarian cancer. Presently, the prevalence data for HRD are available from selected geographies only and range from 31% to 50%. Furthermore, the risk factors associated with HRD and clinical characteristics of patients with HRD need exploration for region-specific differences. In the present study, we will estimate the region- and country-specific prevalence of HRD in women with stage III or IV high-grade serous or endometrioid ovarian, primary peritoneal, and/or fallopian tube cancer and associated risk factors with clinical characteristics in Asia-Pacific countries, Latin America, Africa, Russia, Australia, and Middle East countries. The findings of the study will help the oncologists in optimal patient selection and clinical decision-making for the first-line maintenance of patients with HGSOC
This protocol is designed to provide participants currently benefiting from rucaparib treatment in a Clovis-sponsored clinical study with continued access to treatment for as long as they continue to benefit. Participants in long-term follow-up (LTFU) in a parent study may also enroll in this study for continued data collection, as applicable based on parent study objectives.
In April 2017, Tesaro, Inc. opened an expanded access program (EAP) to make niraparib, an investigational poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor, available to eligible women with recurrent epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer following a complete or partial response to platinum-based chemotherapy, mainly for BRCA wild-type (BRCAwt) tumor patients, a clear unmet medical need for these ovarian cancer patients. As of 19 August 2019, the EAP closing date, there were 446 patients enrolled in 105 Spanish sites. 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 study seeks to evaluate the safety profile and dose adjustments of niraparib in platinum sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer patients treated in a real world setting within the Spanish expanded access program (EAP).
The study consists of a retrospective observational, multicenter study in which the fundamental exposure factor being investigated is a drug (rucaparib). A clinical database will be built including clinical data in three scenarios of rucaparib treatment: (1) platinum-sensitive BRCA-mutated patients after progression, (2) maintenance therapy in patients after a platinum-sensitive relapse in response, and (3) treatment therapy in BRCA-mutated patients who are currently platinum-resistant. The specific objectives of the study are: - To describe patient characteristics/medical history, safety, efficacy, and dosing of on-label treatment with rucaparib in real-world patients (real-world data). - To describe patient characteristics/medical history, safety, efficacy, and dosing of all patients treated with rucaparib (including patients with on-label treatment and others) in real-world patients (real-world data). - To show that data obtained in clinical trials could be reproduced in non-screened patients.
Current guidelines recommend universal genetic testing for all patients with ovarian, fallopian and peritoneal cancer. The purpose of this trial is to investigate the non-inferiority of streamlined genetics education and testing for this patient population when compared to the traditional model of referral to genetic counseling. Patients will be randomized to either the streamlined or the traditional counseling arm. Those in the streamlined group will watch a brief educational video and have the option of immediate testing; The traditional counseling arm will instead be referred for a formal genetics consultation, after which they can choose to be tested. The primary outcome will be a patient reported outcome scale that assesses patient satisfaction with genetic counseling; patient anxiety and distress and cost effectiveness when using both strategies will also be evaluated. The study poses minimal risk to the patients that would not be encountered during standard of care genetic counseling.
This is an open-label, non-randomized, multicenter, dose-escalation and expansion study in patients with selected solid tumors.
This is a Phase 1 first in human, open label, multi-center, dose escalation study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, anti-tumor activity and pharmacodynamic effects of SL-172154 in subjects with ovarian cancer.
This study is designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of mirvetuximab soravtansine (MIRV) in patients with platinum-resistant high-grade serous epithelial ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer, whose tumors express a high-level of Folate Receptor-Alpha (FRĪ±). Patients will be, in the opinion of the Investigator, appropriate for single-agent therapy for their next line of therapy. All patients will receive single-agent MIRV at 6 mg/kg adjusted ideal body weight administered on Day 1 of every 3-week cycle.
This is a prospective observational French multicenter cohort in patients with ovarian and/or primitive peritoneal and/or fallopian tubes carcinoma, histologically confirmed, with an advanced stage at diagnosis (stage III to IV FIGO 2014). The objective is to constitute a clinico-biological database that allows to correlate clinical and progressive features of ovarian cancer patients based on tumor genomics and molecular detected abnormalities.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV), a widely prevalent virus in the general US population, has been shown to be associated with increased inflammation and mortality. Previous small pilot studies have demonstrated that latent CMV may be reactivated during chemotherapy in cancer patients, and may be associated with unfavorable cancer outcomes such as fatigue and increased mortality. The central research idea for this study, supported by previous preliminary data, is that CMV reactivation is an unrecognized complicating factor in the treatment of ovarian cancer that impacts patient outcomes. The overarching goals of this observational study are: - To assess how CMV infection is associated with ovarian cancer symptoms over the course of the disease and its treatment. - To describe the relationship between CMV reactivation in ovarian cancer patients, survival, fatigue, and other QOL outcomes, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally.