View clinical trials related to Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:This is a prospective, single arm, phase II clinical study on the treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer (Ⅱ B to Ⅳ a) with Zimberelimab combined with concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
The study is a domestic multicenter, prospective, non-randomized controlled concurrent trial. It will be assessed whether surgery staging on locally advanced cervical cancer is superior to image staging for improving progression-free survival and overall survival.
This study is a single-center, single-arm, open-phase II clinical study, the main purpose of which is to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of camrelizumab combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy for early and locally advanced cervical cancer, i.e., FIGO 2018 IB2-IIIB cervical cancer. Eligible subjects will be given cisplatin and radiotherapy, for 6-8 weeks, camrelizumab repeated every 14 days until disease progression, toxicity intolerance, or other reasons specified in the protocol. Subjects who finished treatment entered the safety follow-up or survival follow-up.
To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of camrelizumab combined with radiotherapy and chemotherapy for recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer
Single arm multicenter phase II trial evaluating the role of Pembrolizumab in combination to Carboplatin-Paclitaxel chemotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer patients.
This cohort study is to evaluate the role of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) in the treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC). Sixty patients with LACC (FIGO 2009 stage IB2 to IIB) will be enrolled. After informed consents, they would accept the imaging evaluation of pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET). After excluding cases of distant metastasis, they will accept two cycles of NAC (paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 and cisplatin 70 mg/m2, on day 1, once for three weeks). Then a second MRI is performed to evaluate the imaging response. For patients achieving objective response, radical hysterectomy (RH, via laparoscopy or laparotomy) and an evaluation of pathologic response are performed. For patients without objective imaging response, the choice of concurrent chemoradiotherapy or radical hysterectomy will be discussed. After RH, adjuvant therapy will be given according to the RH pathologic results. The primary objectives consist of (1) the objective imaging response after NAC; (2) the objective pathologic response after RH. The secondary objectives consist of (1) disease-free survival and overall survival after various therapy modalities; (2) severe adverse effects of NAC; (3) the effects of NAC on the surgical outcomes.
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility and efficacy of preoperative nimotuzumab injection combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy for initially inoperable, locally advanced cervical cancer.