View clinical trials related to Ovarian Cancer.
Filter by:Primary stage III-IV epithelial ovarian cancer randomizing between interval cytoreductive surgery with or without hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC)
A study to discuss the advantage of Fapi PET- CT in the initial diagnosis staging and lesion determination of ovarian cancer,whether it can be a evaluation strategy as an R0 evaluation tool or a prediction tool of chemotherapy response and evaluation of prognosis.
This is a multi-cohort, randomized, open, multicenter Phase II study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of AL2846 capsules in patients with advanced lung cancer and ovarian cancer. Objective response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival (PFS) are the primary endpoints.
The research purpose of this study is to use organoid cultured from patients' own ovarian cancer tissues as models, screen potential clinical therapeutic drugs (such as paclitaxel, gemcitabine, etc.) in vitro, formulate individualized drug treatment plans for individual patient, and evaluate the clinical application value of organ like drug sensitivity technology.
TScan Therapeutics is developing cellular therapies across multiple solid tumors in which autologous participant-derived T cells are engineered to express a T cell receptor that recognizes cancer-associated antigens presented on specific Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) molecules. The purpose of this screening study is to collect samples to conduct HLA genotyping, HLA Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH) and expression of Tumor-associated Antigens (TAA) testing. These results will be used to determine if subjects meet the eligibility criteria for these parameters and could potentially be enrolled in a TScan clinical treatment study.
Ovarian cancer (OC) is the fifth most common cause of cancer death. More than 40% are older than 70 years. The standard treatment is radical surgery combined with chemotherapy. More than 40% of the Danish patients will never undergo surgery. Frail and immunodeficient older patients are at higher risk of complications, and immunomodulating treatment as chemotherapy results in different outcomes in comparable patients. No accurate validated screening tool to identify frail and immunodeficient OC women exists. Optimization through comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) and physical training before and during treatment may improve outcomes and decrease associated risks. Aim: Primary endpoints will be to determine whether a CGA and physical training vs standard of care can increase the proportion of patients later on referred to interval debulking surgery, and examine the performance of validated screening tests in predicting impairments in CGA. Other endpoints will be to evaluate if intervention can improve completion of chemotherapy, to examine the association between frailty screening scores and selected biomarkers with treatment outcomes, including complications and quality of life, and ultimately to develop an improved frailty screening tool based on known screening tools, functional tests and biomarkers identifying patients who will benefit from CGA. Method: This is a nationwide, randomized intervention study. Patients ≥70 years diagnosed with primary OC at the Gynecological departments of Rigshospitalet, Odense and Roskilde University Hospitals will be included. In an interdisciplinary collaboration between medical specialists in oncology, gynecology and geriatrics, included patients will be screened for frailty using validated screening tools and functional tests. Specific biomarkers and immunologic profile will be assessed in all patients. Patients selected for neoadjuvant chemotherapy will be randomized to receive CGA or standard of care. Patients selected for primary debulking surgery or palliation will be followed in an observational cohort. Perspective: The development of a validated screening tool for frailty assessment and immunological status will help us identify frail patients who may need optimization before treatment, resulting in more patients getting optimal treatment (either surgery or chemotherapy), prevent post-treatment complications and avoid palliative patients from undergoing a redundant complex treatment.
The investigators aim to develop an advanced imaging platform, such as dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) 13C-MRI, MR fingerprinting (MRF) and MR Relaxometry, which combines with traditional anatomical contrast CT, MRI and PET, and integrate blood/urine metabolomics methods. A comprehensive strategy to thoroughly analyze the immune activation of spleen pattern, microstructure, cell density, red blood cell iron content, immune cell glycolysis and metabolic flow rate.
This Phase 3 study is designed to investigate the safety, diagnostic performance, and clinical usefulness of Gleolan for the real-time detection and visualization of epithelial ovarian cancer tumors during debulking surgery. The study is planned to run for about 18 months with individual study participation lasting about two (2) weeks.
Historically, participation in clinical trials has been highly skewed towards specific demographic groups. However, research identifying which trial attributes impact participation, in either positive or negative ways, is limited. This study invites participants to record a wide range of data on their clinical trial experience, with the goal being to identify factors which persistently limit patients' ability to participate in, or complete, a trial in which they were initially interested. Data will be analyzed through a range of demographic lenses, in hopes of discovering patterns which might improve the experience of future ovarian cancer patients.
10 participants are expected to be enrolled for this open,Single-armed clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of the recombinant herpes simplex virus I, R130 in patients with relapsed/refractory ovarian cancer.