View clinical trials related to Gynecologic Cancers.
Filter by:Gynecologic cancers (cancers of cervix, endometrium, ovary, vagina, and vulva) represent an important part of the female cancer in France with more than 15 000 new cases in 2012. As considerable progress have been made in diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, an important part of the gynecologic cancers are diagnosed at an early stage and globally, the after treatment overall survival rate is estimated to more than 80% at five years. Thus, it is of evident interest to study health related Quality of Life (QoL) among these patients who will continue to live after their cancer and to consider QoL as a primary end-point, beyond overall survival. The GYNEQOL (health related Quality Of Life of women with GYNEcologic cancer) group is a working group initiated in Besançon and whose goal is to investigate QoL of gynecologic cancers' patients. It gathers several entities from the hospital of Besançon, namely the Methodology and Quality of Life in Oncology Unit, the Gynecologic Unit and the Oncology Unit. The GYNEQOL study is a project of a prospective cohort study, in a pragmatic clinical practice, with the main objective of longitudinally collecting and analyzing QoL data of these women. The pilot phase, GYNEQOL-Pilot, restricted to the hospital of Besançon, has started in September 2015 with the goal of assessing the feasibility of the cohort. The feature of this study is that patients answer to QoL questionnaires using tablets computer and the Computer-based Health Evaluation System software (CHES). Indeed, use of electronic solutions to collect patient reported outcomes is drastically increasing those last years. It has been underlined that routinely collecting symptoms could increase both QoL and survival among cancer patients. It enables to use these data in real-time in routine practice by presenting QoL scores to physicians in simple graphical histograms for both transversal and longitudinal measurements and it ensures a reliable data collection.
This phase I dose escalation study will evaluate IGF-Methotrexate conjugate (765IGF-MTX) in patients with advanced, previously treated tumors. 765IGF-MTX is administered as an IV infusion over 1 hour on days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28 day cycle. Treatment continues until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or patient refusal. Assessment of response will be confirmed with imaging studies performed at the end of cycle 2 +/- 7 days, and every 2 weeks thereafter.
This is an observational, exploratory study designed to collect (record) and analyze normal and abnormal sound data from the human bladder during surgery using a novel sensor-based catheter system (Electronic Catheter Stethoscope) and to develop algorithms to detect changes of baseline bladder and ureteral function. The Electronic Catheter Stethoscope device will measure acoustic and pressure data within the bladder. The measurements will be used to detect any leakage from the bladder and/or changes in baseline ureteral flow by correlation of sound data with surgical data reported by the surgeon. These data will be used to develop algorithms to detect changes of baseline bladder and ureteral function. The algorithms will be tested in future clinical trials.
We hope to determine the importance of different genes (including B receptors) in anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy. This has important benefits to patients exposed to anthracyclines, as this could help determine whether certain individuals have increased susceptibility to cardiac injury.
The purpose of this study is to try to understand the biology of development of breast, ovarian, fallopian tube, peritoneal or endometrial cancer from persons at high genetic risk for these diseases. The influence of environmental factors on cancer development in individuals and families will be studied. The efficacy of treatments for these diseases will be evaluated.
Pilot study for assessing the effectiveness of a Navigator program to aid in clinical trial participation amongst the Chinese demographic
We have an active research program in gastrointestinal cancers including clinical trials, epidemiologic, and translational studies. We would like to establish a biospecimen bank linked to useful clinical information in order to learn more about diagnostic, predictive and prognostic markers for gastrointestinal cancers. PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: 1. To collect and store tumor and normal tissue (previously collected paraffin embedded or frozen specimen) and blood in patients with gastrointestinal (GI) cancers. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: 1. Collect detailed clinical information via a patient questionnaire that includes demographic, socioeconomic, lifestyle, family, past medical, medication and cancer histories 2. Collect details about the tumor specimen extracted from patient charts.