View clinical trials related to Head and Neck Neoplasms.
Filter by:A single center, open, single arm dose escalation phase I study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of CRTE7A2-01 TCR-T cell for HPV16 positive advanced cervical, anal, or head and neck cancers. The study will determine MTD of CRTE7A2-01 TCR-T cell injection, as well as investigate RP2D.
The primary purpose of this study is to determine the safe reduction of the treatment fractions to 10, 8, or 5, that may be delivered safely in resected head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients with intermediate pathologic risk features.
This will be an international, multicenter, retrospective, observational, and data-driven study using secondary data captured in EHRs. The extraction of the data captured in the EHRs will be performed with SAVANA's EHRead®, an innovative data-driven system based on Natural Language Processing (NLP) and machine learning. For all patients, the Index Date is defined as the timepoint within the study period when they fulfill ALL inclusion criteria and no exclusion criteria. Follow-up comprises the period between Index Date and the last EHR available within the study period. Additional variable-specific time windows may be considered to optimize data collection.
This clinical trial improves an existing pain management program and tests its effect on head and neck cancer survivors. This trial aims to find a better program to improve pain-related physical functioning, mood, and quality of life in a sample of individuals who have undergone treatment for head and neck cancer.
This phase II trial studies the effect of a plant-based oral nutrition supplement, Kate Farms Standard 1.4 and/or Standard 1.0. as a primary source of nutrition in reducing the gastrostomy tube placement rate in patients with head and neck cancer that has spread to nearby tissue or lymph nodes (locally advanced) and who are undergoing chemoradiation therapy. Gastrostomy tube (G-tube) placement can be used for enteral feedings and may lead to long term side effects such as swallowing dysfunction and lead to higher rates of permanent G-tube dependence. The Kate Farms pea protein oral nutrition supplement is formulated with organic, planted-based protein for easier digestibility without artificial sweeteners or additives and without common allergens such as dairy, soy, gluten or corn. It is nutritionally complete, calorie and protein dense and available in multiple flavors that can be consumed directly or as a base for other recipes. Giving pea protein oral nutrition supplement may provide nutritional support to decrease the need for therapeutic G-tube rate during chemoradiation compared to standard supportive care.
Doctors leading this study hope to learn about the safety and effectiveness of combining medications HB-201 and HB-202 (also known as TheraT® vectors) with chemotherapy using carboplatin and paclitaxel in the beginning of the study (induction) and if combining these medications can increase tumor shrinkage after therapy and reduce the amount of radiotherapy and chemotherapy that will later be needed. In addition, the study is looking at ways to reduce side effects overall using robotic surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, or radiotherapy alone. Your participation in this research will last about 2 years. HB-201 and HB-202 are experimental (meaning the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved these drugs), and therefore they can only be given in a research study.
This study examines how head and neck cancer treatment affects quality of sleep over time and factors that contribute to sleep quality. Sleep plays a critical role in healing and quality of life, and recent studies investigating sleep disorders in head and neck cancer patients reveal sleep quality is a major determinant of post-treatment outcomes. Information from this study may help researchers better understand how treatment impacts sleep quality so that they can make changes that may help improve patient sleep quality.
The Photobiomodulation therapy could have positive effects on quality of life and oral health in head and neck cancer survivors post-radiotherapy. The improvement in quality of life will be maintained after a follow-up period.
This study allows head and neck cancer surgeons to specifically visualize cancerous cells apart from normal healthy tissue. 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) is a safe and effective FDA-approved agent successfully used by neurosurgeons for FGS of different brain tumors is given to the patients preoperatively. Using specific wavelengths of light as well as specialized magnified lenses the surgeons use this technique to assist in tumor resection.
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma is the 6th most common cancer worldwide with an annual incidence of 12000 cases in the UK alone. More than 60% of cases are diagnosed at the locally advanced stage. These patients are treated with radical intent, using a combination of surgery, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. Unfortunately 5 in 10 patients relapse within 2 years, with most relapses occurring within the first year since treatment. Unlike many other solid tumours, 80% of relapses occur locoregionally. Salvage surgery offers the best chance of long-term survival for patients with loco-regional recurrence, but this is only possible if the recurrence is amenable to resection. Salvage surgery has been estimated to improve survival outcomes in relapsed cancer by up to 73%. For salvage surgery to be feasible, relapses need to be detected early. Current surveillance strategies have little evidence base, with imaging often driven by clinical symptoms - often when the recurrence is no longer amenable to salvage surgery. With this study, we will address the unmet clinical need to develop a risk-stratified surveillance pathway to enhance detection of early relapse of radically treated head and neck cancer. At present, tumour grade and biomarkers such as HPV status have offered important but insufficient information to guide surveillance strategies.