View clinical trials related to Fallopian Tube Cancer.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to show the superiority of the new unidirectional barbed suture (SYMMCORA® mid-term, unidirectional) to conventional suture material in terms of time to perform the vaginal cuff closure during gynecologic surgeries without an increase in the complication rate. Secondly, the superiority of SYMMCORA®, mid-term unidirectional compared to the V-Loc®, unidirectional will be assessed regarding the mean time to close the vaginal cuff. The study will be performed in routine clinical setting, the only difference will be the randomization into two different suture groups. Both suture materials which will be applied to approximate the vaginal cuff are approved and carrying the CE-marks. Additionally, both sutures will be applied in their intended use. Neither additional invasive measures nor additional burden in regard to the patient will be performed.
HS-20089 is an investigational antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) composed of a humanized IgG1 anti-B7-H4 monoclonal antibody conjugated to the topoisomerase I inhibitor payload via a protease-cleavable linker, with an average drug-to-antibody ratio of about 6. This is a phase 2, open-label, multi-center study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics (PK) and immunogenicity of HS-20089 as monotherapy in patients with recurrent or metastatic ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer.
The survival of ovarian cancer patients is dependent on the stage at diagnosis; more than 70% of patients present with advanced stage disease (stage III/IV). In England, one-year survival is 98.7% at stage I and 51.4% at stage IV and five-year survival is 93.3% and 13.4% respectively. Standard treatment for advanced ovarian cancer involves surgery to remove all visible tumour and chemotherapy. Removal of all visible disease, so no tumour deposits are visible to the naked eye at the end of first-line surgery, is one of the strongest predictors of overall survival. A majority of the women presenting with advanced disease are older and frail. Extensive open surgery discriminates against such women as they may not be well enough for the surgery offered. A recent national audit in England found that 60.1% of women over the age of 79yrs diagnosed with ovarian cancer received no cancer treatment at all. The ability to provide the same surgery via a minimally invasive route such as robotic surgery potentially widens access to cancer treatment. The MIRRORS Feasibility study (NCT04402333) completed recently at the Royal Surrey County Hospital in Guildford showed significantly enhanced recovery with short length of stay and reduced blood loss enabling faster recommencement of chemotherapy in women with advanced disease undergoing robotic surgery compared to open surgery (requiring a cut in the abdomen). In the current proposed study funded by Intuitive Foundation and GRACE Charity, the investigators will establish the feasibility of conducting a randomised controlled trial and collect data from three hospital sites to inform a future phase 3 randomised controlled trial. The aim will be to to improve patient experience, access to surgery, recovery, reduce morbidity and reduce time to chemotherapy by incorporating robotic cytoreductive surgery into the ovarian cancer treatment pathway for women with a pelvic mass </=8cm
The goal of this observational study is to identify and analyze the characteristics, treatment trends, prognostic factors and survival prognosis of Korean gynecologic cancer patients. Ultimately, the final goal is to contribute to the development of safe surgical methods and treatment for gynecologic cancer to improve survival rates.
The Principal Investigator hypothesizes the combination of MIRV and Olaparib is an effective, and tolerable, maintenance therapy strategy in platinum sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer.
A Phase 2/3 study to investigate the efficacy and safety of luveltamab tazevibulin versus IC chemotherapy in women with ovarian cancer (including fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancers) expressing FOLR1.
AI-061 is a co-formulation drug product (DP) consisting of 1:1 ratio mix of AI-025, an anti-PD-1 antibody, and ONC-392, an anti-CTLA-4 antibody. This is a dose escalation study to identify the maximum toxicity dose (MTD) or the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D).
10 participants are expected to be enrolled for this open,Single-armed clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of the recombinant herpes simplex virus I, R130 in patients with relapsed/refractory ovarian cancer.
This study is an exploratory, single-center, prospective single-arm study to explore the efficacy of Huaier granules in the treatment of stage Ⅱ-Ⅳ primary ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer, and peritoneal cancer after satisfactory tumor reduction (R0/R1). Twenty-five patients with FIGOⅡ-Ⅳ ovarian cancer, peritoneal cancer or tubal cancer confirmed by histopathology were enrolled and treated with Huaier granules. During the study period, the patients were followed up once at 3 months, and the medication was continued until progression or intolerability of toxicity. This is an exploratory, single-center, prospective single-arm study to explore the efficacy of Huaier granules in the treatment of stage Ⅱ-Ⅳ primary ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer, and peritoneal cancer after satisfactory tumor reduction (R0/R1). Twenty-five patients with FIGOⅡ-Ⅳ ovarian cancer, peritoneal cancer or tubal cancer confirmed by histopathology were enrolled and treated with Huaier granules. During the study period, the patients were followed up once at 3 months, and the medication was continued until progression or intolerability of toxicity.
This is an open-label, non-randomized, multicenter, dose-escalation and expansion study in patients with selected solid tumors.