View clinical trials related to Mouth Neoplasms.
Filter by:To assess the safety of preoperative combination therapy with KW-0761 (anti-CCR4) and ONO-4538 (anti-PD-1). To assess the behavior of immune cells in peripheral blood and tumor.
This is a randomized,controled, phase II, open label study of postoperative concurrent chemoradiotherapy with Docetaxel versus Cisplatin for high-risk squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity cancer.The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of concurrent chemoradiotherapy with docetaxel in OCC patients.
The goal of this clinical research study is to learn how a new method for performing oral (mouth) exams can help doctors check for suspicious lesions (called premalignant and malignant oral lesions [PMOL]) in the mouth of HIV-infected smokers.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the correlation between DNA methylation and the treatment and recurrence of oral cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effects of a novel oral care protocol on the severity and pain of oral mucositis in patients receiving radiation and/or chemotherapy for head and neck cancers. The secondary objectives are to characterize the microbiome associated with oral mucositis, measure salivary proinflammatory cytokines, and evaluate other clinical indicators of the intervention. Participants will be enrolled prior to beginning radiation and/or chemotherapy, and will be randomized to receive either the oral health protocol or standard of care oral hygiene.
Prospective study of diagnosis validation of a cytological technique. 200 patients with oral cavity cancerous and precancerous lesions will be enrolled. A cytological sample of the lesion will be performed by transepithelial brushing ( Orcellex® Rovers brush) in cytology liquid-based technology (methode ThinPrep 2000 (Hologic®)). A microscopic double blind reading will be performed. A biopsy sampling will be carried out in accordance with current strategy of screening. The brushing diagnosis quality will be compared to the biopsy which is the gold standard.
Cervical lymph node involvement, in head and cancer neck patients, is one of the most important prognostic factors. Currently patients undergo neck dissection removing some or all nodes and neck involvement is retrospectively determined. Sentinel lymph node (SLN) identification and biopsy has become clinical practise in other areas including breast, skin, and gastric cancer. The gold standard for detecting metastatic lymph nodes is pathological analysis, but the lack of an accurate or clinically accepted way to identify sentinel lymph nodes in the cervical region has motivated the usage of indocyanine green (ICG) and near-infrared fluorescence (NIR) imaging (Pinpoint, Novadaq, Waterloo). A prospective clinical trial using a commercially available NIR system and ICG injection around the tumour site will evaluate the ability to detect and biopsy sentinel lymph nodes in head and neck cancer patients.
This four-year, prospective, longitudinal study will evaluate and validate a patient-reported outcome measure, clinician-reported outcome measures, and imaging techniques in assessing characteristics, trajectory, and progression of lymphedema and fibrosis (LEF) in oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer patients. This clinical trial studies patient-and-clinician-reported measures as well as standard imaging methods to see how accurate they are in identifying and evaluating lymphedema (swelling) or fibrosis (tough or tight tissue) in the head and neck region of patients receiving treatment for newly diagnosed stage II-IV oral cavity or oropharyngeal cancer. Lymphedema and fibrosis (LEF) can lead to physical symptoms, such as trouble swallowing and chewing, as well as psychological and emotional symptoms, such as negative body image and avoiding social interactions. Finding an accurate test to identify and evaluate LEF may allow doctors to treat LEF more quickly and control symptoms more effectively, and thus provide patients with a better quality of life.
45 individuals were subdivided into 3 groups, 15 patients with oral premalignant lesions, 15 patients with oral malignant lesions and 15 control individuals. Levels of chemerin and MMP-9 were evaluated in serum and saliva of these subjects utilizing the ELISA technique.
The aim of the study is to investigate post-surgery sensory impairment and life quality changes in oral cancer patients who underwent free flap (Free Flap) on post-operative 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months, respectively