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Ovarian Neoplasms clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04376073 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Platinum-resistant Ovarian Cancer

Anlotinib and Niraparib Dual Therapy Evaluation in Platinum-resistant Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

ANNIE
Start date: May 22, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

At present, the standard treatment for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients is platinum-free chemotherapy, with poor efficacy and tolerance. The combination of anti-angiogenic drugs and PARPi can play a synergistic anti-tumor role and achieve good efficacy in platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer. This study intends to explore the safety and effectiveness of anlotinib and niraparib dual therapy in patients with platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer, and primary peritoneal cancer (ovarian cancer).

NCT ID: NCT04339140 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Zafirlukast in Treatment of Marker Relapsed Ovarian Cancer

Start date: June 24, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This research study is evaluating the effectiveness of Zafirlukast to prevent tumor activity in participants with tumor marker-only relapsed ovarian cancer. - The name of the study drug involved in this study is: - Zafirlukast

NCT ID: NCT04337632 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Sensitivity to Different Chemotherapy Regimens in Platinum-Partial Sensitive Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Multicenter, prospective, randomized studies.Evaluation of the sensitivity to different chemotherapy regimens in platinum-partial sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer based on 11 gene tests of homologous recombination pathway.

NCT ID: NCT04329494 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Metastatic Malignant Solid Neoplasm

PIPAC for the Treatment of Peritoneal Carcinomatosis in Patients With Ovarian, Uterine, Appendiceal, Colorectal, or Gastric Cancer

Start date: August 21, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This phase I trial studies the side effects of pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC) in treating patients with ovarian, uterine, appendiceal, stomach (gastric), or colorectal cancer that has spread to the lining of the abdominal cavity (peritoneal carcinomatosis). Chemotherapy drugs, such as cisplatin, doxorubicin, oxaliplatin, leucovorin, fluorouracil, mitomycin, and irinotecan, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. PIPAC is a minimally invasive procedure that involves the administration of intraperitoneal chemotherapy. The study device consists of a nebulizer (a device that turns liquids into a fine mist), which is connected to a high-pressure injector, and inserted into the abdomen (part of the body that contains the digestive organs) during a laparoscopic procedure (a surgery using small incisions to introduce air and to insert a camera and other instruments in the abdominal cavity for diagnosis and/or to perform routine surgical procedures). Pressurization of the liquid chemotherapy through the study device results in aerosolization (a fine mist or spray) of the chemotherapy intra-abdominally (into the abdomen). Giving chemotherapy through PIPAC may reduce the amount of chemotherapy needed to achieve acceptable drug concentration, and therefore potentially reduces side effects and toxicities.

NCT ID: NCT04314401 Recruiting - Multiple Myeloma Clinical Trials

National Cancer Institute "Cancer Moonshot Biobank"

Start date: November 11, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This trial collects multiple tissue and blood samples, along with medical information, from cancer patients. The "Cancer Moonshot Biobank" is a longitudinal study. This means it collects and stores samples and information over time, throughout the course of a patient's cancer treatment. By looking at samples and information collected from the same people over time, researchers hope to better understand how cancer changes over time and over the course of medical treatments.

NCT ID: NCT04295577 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Multi-Centre Observational Study of Maintenance Niraparib in Treatment of Ovarian CanceR

MONITOR-UK
Start date: February 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a multi-centre, observational (non-interventional) study, designed to follow patients with advanced ovarian fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancer, who are receiving Niraparib as maintenance treatment, according to the Niraparib access criteria (via TESARO patient access programme, EMA licence and NHS pending NICE assessment due 2018) including assessment of tolerability to Niraparib therapy.

NCT ID: NCT04284969 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

PROADAPT-ovary/EWOC-2

Start date: June 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

PROADAPT is a standardized geriatric intervention that is currently being co-constructed during an exploratory phase on a multi-professional and multi-disciplinary basis after a systematic analysis of published data (Figure). It consists in: 1) before surgery: a prehabilitation of the patients including a nutritional, physical and educational preparation; 2) during the hospitalization for surgery: an optimisation of their treatments through a pharmaceutical conciliation, educational interventions, standardization of surgical procedures and enhanced rehabilitation after surgery; 3) bridging and post-discharge interventions for hospital-to-home transition. This intervention is based on a logic change model, constructed with literature data and validated by an expert group through a DELPHI method : the rehabilitation model. This intervention was designed to be implemented pragmatically in the centers according local habits and is currently being evaluated in several distinct hospital contexts under the name of "PROADAPT pilot study" in different tumor contexts thanks to a grant from the Regional Health Agency of Rhône-Alpes Auvergne region. PROADAPT intervention is planned to be evaluated in 4 tumor models inducing complex medico-surgical procedures considered at high risk of geriatric deconditioning. They have the same primary objectives in order to be evaluated into a meta-analysis. Results will be used to test the validity of the rehabilitation model. Therefore, it is a study reaching the goal of the population health intervention research. The purpose of the PROADAPT-ovary/EWOC-2 study is to evaluate the impact of PROADAPT on patient's post-surgical outcomes in patients ≥ 70 years old with an advanced ovarian cancer (AOC).

NCT ID: NCT04282356 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Intensive Intraperitoneal Therapy in Advanced Ovarian Cancer

INTENS-IP
Start date: September 15, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Clinicians postulate that it may be interesting to combine the two IntraPeritoneal (IP) treatments associated with a significant improvement of OC overall survival i.e. cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) and postoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (IPC) as an " intensive peritoneal " regimen in the initial management of stages III-IVA ovarian cancers. Performing a postoperative IPC may allow completing and extending the duration of the effect of HIPEC in decreasing the risk of peritoneal recurrence. HIPEC may also allow administering an early IP treatment on the residual microscopic disease during initial or interval surgery with an optimal access to the intraperitoneal cavity. Postoperative IPC will extend the HIPEC effect on unsterilized peritoneal microscopic residues with the aim of decreasing the risk of local recurrence. Performing HIPEC before IPC could allow limiting the number of postoperative IP courses needed. Nevertheless, this association questions its feasibility and tolerance, which should both be assessed in a phase II trial. Clinicians propose to conduct this feasibility study combining for the first time HIPEC with IPC as first-line treatment of ovarian cancer with peritoneal carcinomatosis to perform a peritoneal intensification.

NCT ID: NCT04280185 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

HIPEC in the Treatment of Stage IIc-IV Epithelial Ovarian Cancer After CRS (HIPECOC)

Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluate the Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy(HIPEC) in the treatment of Stage IIc-IV epithelial Ovarian Cancer after primary Cytoreductive Surgery (CRS).Half participants will receive HIPEC twice with one intravenous chemotherapy and 5 cycles of intravenous chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxel after CRS. Half participants will receive 6 cycles of intravenous chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxel after CRS.

NCT ID: NCT04261465 Recruiting - Clinical trials for High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer

NUVOLA TRIAL Open-label Multicentre Study

NUVOLA
Start date: December 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Around 15-25% of ovarian cancer (OC) patients carry germ-line mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. Recent evidences showed that OC women with germline BRCA1/2 mutations (gBRCAmut) have an improved survival and higher platinum-sensitivity compared to BRCA1/2 naive (BRCAwt). Interestingly, disease appearance in BRCAmut women is more diffuse than in BRCAwt cases, with significantly higher peritoneal tumour load. Nonetheless, BRCAmut women additionally show a higher benefit of platinum-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) plus interval debulking surgery compared with BRCAwt women in terms of clinical and pathological responses, suggesting that BRCA mutational status might be used as a molecular tool to personalize treatment in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) patients. OLAPARIB in BRCA mutation carriers Olaparib is a potent oral poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor that causes synthetic lethality in BRCA1/2-deficient tumour cells. In patients with platinum-sensitive relapsed serous ovarian cancer, olaparib maintenance treatment significantly improved the duration of progression-free survival compared with placebo (hazard ratio [HR] 0.35 [95% CI (confidence interval) 0.25-0.49]; p<0.0001), with the greatest clinical benefit in patients with BRCA mutations (HR 0.18 [95% CI 0.10-0.31]; p<0.0001). Preclinical data suggest that olaparib might also potentiate the efficacy of DNA-damaging chemotherapies, including platinum-containing drugs such as carboplatin. In a recent phase Ib/II study, olaparib plus weekly carboplatin and paclitaxel in relapsed ovarian cancer patients was shown to be safe, well tolerated and effective, especially in germline BRCA mutated (gBRCAmut) patients. Possibly, the addition of a PARP inhibitor (olaparib) to NACT in HGSOC patient with germline or somatic BRCA1/2 mutation is able to increase the pathological complete response rate to conventional chemotherapy. Combination of intermittent olaparib with weekly carboplatin and paclitaxel might achieve a higher pathological response rate, with an acceptable toxicity profile.