View clinical trials related to Pediatric Cancer.
Filter by:Treatment for childhood cancer causes treatment-related acute adverse events such as muscle weakness and physical incompetence. With long admissions, isolation, and long-term bed rest, this means reduced physical activity and, ultimately, gross motor functioning development is affected. Furthermore, the children participate less in sport and leisure activities, inhibiting social skills, and the children feel isolated from peers. The above makes it difficult for children to return to everyday activities. Physical activity in the form of play and movement activities is essential for preschool children's gross motor, social, and personal development- a development where parents play a crucial role. Replay is a randomized controlled trial that will include 84 children with cancer aged 1-5 years at the University Hospital Copenhagen, Rigshospitalet. The children are included at the treatment initiation and are randomized to either the intervention group or the control group. The intervention consists of six months of daily structured play-based physical activity, including daily parent administered play and movement and three weekly group-based play and movement sessions at the hospital during admissions. Gross motor and physical function is measured with 1) Peabody Developmental Motor Scales, Second Edition (PDMS-2), Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI), Handgrip strength, and a six-minute walk test. The assessment time points are baseline (initiated timepoint), 3- and 6 months (endpoint) after initiated treatment. The intervention group will be observed and invited to participate in qualitative interviews. The control group will receive usual care and specific physiotherapy if needed.
The study is a nationwide, multicenter, open label, randomized controlled trial. A target population of 220 children in treatment for cancer with neutropenic fever and a neutrophil count below 0.5 × 10⁹ cells/L with expected duration for more than 7 days will be recruited during the first 48 hours of antibiotic treatment (24 months inclusion period). They will be randomized 1:1 as follows: - Experimental group: Discontinuation of antibiotics, despite neutrophil count below 0.5 × 10⁹ cells/L, after 48 hours of apyrexia and clinical stability - Control group: Discontinuation of antibiotics when neutrophil count is equal to or above 0.5 × 10⁹ cells/L and the child is afebrile and clinically stable (up to maximum of 14 days after apyrexia and clinical stability). Primary endpoint is the number of days without antibiotic treatment in 28 days after treatment initiation. Secondary endpoints are crude mortality, severe adverse events, days with relapsing fever, and alterations of the microbiome.
The purpose is to evaluate the safety of PEG-rhG-CSF in the prevention of neutropenia in children with tumor after chemotherapy, and then evaluate the effectiveness of PEG-rhG-CSF in preventing neutropenia in children with tumor after chemotherapy.
The Childhood Cancer Predisposition Study (CCPS) is a multi-center, longitudinal, observational study that will collect clinical and biological data and specimens from children with a cancer predisposition syndromes (CPS) and their relatives. The central hypothesis is that studying individuals at high risk for childhood cancer creates a unique opportunity for improving the understanding of carcinogenesis, tumor surveillance, early detection, and cancer prevention, which will collectively contribute to improving care and outcomes for pediatric patients with cancer and those with cancer predisposition syndromes (CPS).
It involves collecting safety and efficacy data, under the actual conditions of use of medicines in children and adolescents, using a validated tool (Ennov EDC) and relying on the network of Interregional pediatric oncology appeal organizations (OIR) identified by INCa since 2010 and responsible for the organization of Pluridisciplinary Pediatric Interregional (RCPPI) and National Consultative Meetings which discuss each case of relapse in order to define the best therapeutic options.
This is a single center, single arm, open-label and phase I clinical study. The standard 3 + 3 group design was performed. Patients were enrolled by the design of phase I study standard. Sintilimab was divided into three dose levels: 1 mg / kg, 3 mg / kg, and 10 mg / kg. Dose escalation was carried out from the first level of sintilimab. The study is to evaluate the safety, including dose limited toxicity (DLT) in the treatment of advanced, recurrent, and refractory childhood cancer.
Music therapy has become a standard palliative care service in many pediatric and adult hospitals; however, a majority of music therapy research has focused on the use of music to improve psychosocial dimensions of health, without considering biological dimensions. This study builds on prior work examining the psychosocial mechanisms of action underlying an Active Music Engagement (AME) intervention, designed to help manage emotional distress and improve positive health outcomes in young children with cancer and parents, by examining its effects on biomarkers of stress and immune function. The purposes of this two group, randomized controlled trial are to examine biological mechanisms of effect and dose-response relationships of AME on child/parent stress during the consolidation phase of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) treatment. Specific aims are to: Aim 1. Establish whether AME lowers child and parent cortisol during ALL treatment. Aim 2. Examine cortisol as a mediator of AME effects on child and parent outcomes during ALL treatment. Aim 3 (exploratory). Examine the dose-response relationship of AME on child and parent cortisol during ALL treatment. Findings will provide a more holistic understanding about how active music interventions work to mitigate cancer-related stress and its potential to improve immune function, with direct implications for the evidence-based use of music to improve health.
Patient are being asked to provide respiratory and blood samples for a clinical research study because the patients have a virus called the novel coronavirus, or SARS-CoV-2, that causes the disease known as Covid-19. Investigators do not know a lot about this virus, including all the ways it travels from person to person. Investigators also do not know if a person will get sick or not from the virus after being in close contact with someone who has the virus. Because of this, investigators are performing research on the virus found in respiratory secretions to get more information on how investigators can best detect and treat this new virus in the future. Primary Objective - To determine the clinical characteristics and outcomes of Covid-19 in children. - To characterize the clinical risk factors of Covid-19 in children.. Secondary Objectives - To characterize the immunological risk factors and serologic response to SARS-CoV-2 infection in children.- To evaluate the duration of viral shedding in children. - To evaluate the duration of SARS-CoV-2 viral shedding in children. Exploratory Objective
Brain tumours are the leading cause of cancer-related death and morbidity in children, adolescents and young adults. The brain is also one of the most sensitive organs to treatments used in pediatric oncology, even for cancers not related to the central nervous system. Therapeutic index is therefore a major issue in pediatric neuro-oncology. The efficacy of the therapy as well as its toxicity are difficult to measure using standard tests. In order to optimize therapies that could have an impact on the brain, and consequently on the quality of life of patients, it becomes crucial to optimize the means of evaluation. Few studies to date have focused on the various components of memory impacted following treatment of a posterior fossa tumour. However, supra-tentorial structures such as the hippocampus, which have long been described for their role in memory, are either partially irradiated (irradiated in their lower part due to their proximity to the target volume during irradiation of the posterior fossa) or completely irradiated (e.g. included in the prophylactic irradiation of medulloblastoma prior to dose supplementation in the posterior fossa). On the other hand, the cerebellum plays a central role in learning and procedural memory involved in motor and cognitive learning, as it enables automation and procedural retention such as reading (automation of the grapho-phonemic conversion procedure) or arithmetic (mental arithmetic). IMPALA study is aimed at investigating the impact of different irradiation doses received by children treated with radiotherapy on cognitive functions related to the hippocampus and to the cerebellum. This exploratory study will thus provide elements enabling a better limitation of radiotherapy doses on regions linked to the development of cognition and memory. The project brings together researchers and clinicians with complementary expertise in oncology, neurology and imaging in both children and adults. This study will also provide a better understanding of the role of the cerebellum in memory and executive functions, and develop a method that can then be used in a prospective longitudinal multicentre form.
Adolescent and young adult (AYA) survivors of cancer face a future of persistent medical issues across a wide spectrum of diseases One study examining health data from this cohort (ages 15-29) reported significantly higher rates of smoking, obesity, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, asthma, and poorer mental health among the cancer survivors when compared to healthy controls. Prescribed exercise has broad and far-reaching beneficial physiological effects that cut across multiple body systems and consistently improves emotional well-being, decreases fatigue and depression, and enhances quality of life. Although a growing body of evidence consistently demonstrates the physiological and psychological benefits of exercise interventions in adults with cancer, there are no studies examining the effects of individualized, prescribed, supervised exercise in pediatric, adolescent and young adult cancer survivors.