View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:In this pilot project Investigators propose to create annotated image data bank of patients suffering from cancer. The system will provide India's first comprehensive platform to upload annotated images with associated medical and demographic information of a patient. It will support flexible query from the users with appropriate choice from a set of attributes and design of various query filters using a GUI. Over the proposed period of 18 months, images and records related to radiation oncology including pretreatment images of at least 500 patients would be annotated and archived in the data bank. The imaging modalities to be covered are X-RAY mammograms, SPECT, CT, CBCT, MR, PET-CT, Ultrasound, digital histopathology, etc. In this phase, this study will include data sets of five types of cancers namely, breast, head and neck, brain, cervix and lung cancer. Investigator propose to demonstrate the application of this data set in cancer research. Investigator will work on serial PET-CT based radiomics of breast and cervix cancer patients to extract appropriate features and correlate them with clinico-pathological variants.
Studies on radiation induced patients' skin lesions in interventional radiology highlighted the need for optimized and personalized patient dosimetry and adapted patient follow-up. Measurements using Gafchromic® films or thermoluminescent dosimeters have long been the only way to accurately evaluate the maximum absorbed dose to the patient skin. However as these dose measurements are tedious and expensive, they could not be systematically applicable in clinical practice. Therefore, more practical calculation methods have been developed. These software programs calculate the skin dose using dosimetric information from images DICOM header or radiation dose structured reports (RDSRs). Validation studies of these software programs are rare and when existent have many limitations. Radiation Dose Monitor (RDM from Medsquare) is a software program for archiving and monitoring of radiation dose (DACS, Dosimetry Archiving Communication System) used in routine in the investigator's hospitals. A new functionality developed in RDM allows quick estimation without in-vivo measurements of the absorbed dose to the skin of the patient. Comparing RDM calculations with in-vivo measurements will enable this software validation so that it can be used in clinical routine. Main objective: to validate RDM software for calculating patient skin dose in interventional radiology.
Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) are blood disorders that occur when the body makes too many white or red blood cells, or platelets. This overproduction of blood cells in the bone marrow can create problems for blood flow and lead to various symptoms. One of the major problems is the formation of blood clots. These may form in the veins of a patient's legs or arms where they cause leg or arm pain, swelling or difficulty walking. These clots may travel to the lung and then cause chest pain, shortness of breath and sometimes death. Blood clots can also lead to poor or no blood flow to one's heart, brain, or other organs, causing damages that cannot be easily or ever repaired, such as stroke or heart attack. Patients diagnosed with certain types of MPN are associated with a higher risk of developing blood clots and related complications. For this reason, MPN patients are usually treated with low-dose aspirin, a common drug used for blood clot prevention, on long-term basis to prevent the formation of blood clots and other complications. However, recent studies also show that the risk of blood clots remains elevated in MPN patients treated with aspirin, and there may not be improvement or reduction in fatal or other events that are associated with blood clots. In addition, since this medical condition is rare, so there's a lack of studies done with high quality results to help physicians decide the best treatment plan for these patients. The study drug, apixaban, is a new type of orally-taken blood thinner that has been shown to be effective and safe for prevention and treatment of blood clots in various patient populations. The investigators will evaluate whether apixaban is safer and/or better at preventing blood clots and other complications in MPN patients compared to aspirin.
This trial studies how well scrambler therapy works in reducing chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain in patients with cancer. Scrambler therapy is a type of treatment that uses electrodes placed on the skin. Electricity is carried from the electrodes through the skin and blocks the pain.
SYD985.004 is a two-part phase I study with the antibody-drug conjugate SYD985 in combination with niraparib aimed at evaluating safety, pharmacokinetics and efficacy in patients with HER2-expressing locally advanced or metastatic solid tumours.
A Phase I, Multi-center, Open-label, Dose Escalation Study of CS3005 in Subjects with Advanced Solid Tumors
Based on the theory of traditional Chinese Medicine, this study collects eye features of white eyes through the White Eye Imaging Health Care System under visible light and establishes a database of eye-eye features corresponding to the disease. The computer image analysis and artificial intelligence technology are used to visualize the eye. The features were extracted and classified, and the corresponding changes in the characteristics of the traditional Chinese medicine and the disease were analyzed statistically to establish an analytical model corresponding to the disease.
Endoscopic characterization of colorectal lesions has become essential to predict histology and choose the best therapeutic strategy. We have created the CONECCT classification grouping all the endoscopic criteria already published in a single table. To validate this classification, we carried out this comparative study evaluating the endoscopic characterization performance of all recognized classifications and CONECCT in terms of inter-observer agreement and histological prediction.
Anlotinib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) with high effective in inhibiting angiogenesis and tumor cell proliferation by targeting VEGFR, PDGFR, FGFR and c-Kit. Previous phase I trial has shown the potency of anlotinib in treating patients with various cancer types who failed in standard treatment or lack proper treatment regimen. Here, a single center, single-arm, phase II study was conducted to further validate the efficacy and safety of anlotinib in these patients.
This clinical trial is a Phase I, open-label, dose-finding and cohort expansion study to determine the safety and preliminary efficacy of APR-246 in combination with venetoclax and azacitidine in patients with myeloid malignancies.