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Luminal B Breast Cancer clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05163106 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Neoadjuvant Treatment of Locally-advanced Breast Cancer Patients With Ribociclib and Letrozole

NEOLETRIB
Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Patients with locally advanced (stage III) breast cancer (LABC) are characterized by a significantly worse prognosis compared to patients with primarily operable breast cancer. While neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been the first choice in this situation for several decades, recent evidence suggests that some patients may experience an extraordinary effect from neoadjuvant endocrine treatments involving aromatase inhibitors as monotherapy or in modern drug combinations.Selected LABC patients admitted for treatment will be offered combination therapy including letrozole and ribociclib. The overall goal of the project is to improve understanding of tumor responses and resistance in patients suffering from ER-positive/HER-2 negative locally advanced breast cancer, focusing on the role of the immune system including the gut microbiome.

NCT ID: NCT04118062 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Triple Negative Breast Cancer

Communicating With Patients on Cancer Resistance to Treatment: the Development of a Communication Tool. (HECTOR)

Start date: February 2, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Resistance to treatment is one of the major themes in cancer research. Despite this, the definition and clinical implications of resistance to treatment remain under-explored, and patient-physician communication in this context still constitutes a challenge. When resistance to cancer treatments occurs, physicians not only have to explain to the patient the phenomenon of resistance, often based on complex results (biological results, genomic tests, imaging, etc.), but also need to offer alternative therapies, whilst fostering shared medical decision-making. These different tasks are particularly challenging for clinicians, especially since there are large individual differences at patient level. Indeed, each patient has his or her own unique information needs, capacity for understanding, and level of desire to participate in treatment decisions.