View clinical trials related to Prostate Cancer.
Filter by:The aim of multicentre phase 3 trial is evidence diagnostic value of 68Ga-PSMA-11 (in PET / CT and PET / MR techniques) in patients with high-risk and intermediate prostate cancer before radical treatment and in diagnosed patients biochemical recurrence after radical treatment
Administration of MDPK67b to assess its Tolerability and Safety profile in prostate cancer patients, and to assess histo-pathological and molecular changes in prostate tumor tissue samples.
The goal of this observational study is to test whether the ExoDx Prostate test add value in biopsy decision making to patients with prostate cancer on an active surveillance regimen.
This trial will evaluate whether the immune-sensitizing effects of immunotherapy (Pembrolizumab) and radiation with or without a PARP-inhibitor (Olaparib) will increase the effects of immunotherapy in men with high-risk localized prostate cancer.
This study will compare the two imaging modalities (MRI and micro-ultrasound) during Active Surveillance of prostate cancer (PCa). Progression to clinically significant PCa will be assessed by first taking micro-US targeted samples (while blinded to MRI results), followed by MRI targeted samples, finishing with 12 systematic biopsy cores. The primary goal is to compare microUS to MRI for the detection of ≥GG2 PCa at confirmatory biopsy. This study will also collect blood samples from participants to be used for future biomarker studies.
To determine efficacy, safety and tolerabiltiy of topically applied BZ371A in patients that experienced RP, in combination with daily tadalafil compared to placebo.
This is a prospective, open, randomized phase II trial.
ADT with or without robot-assisted PSMA-radioguided surgery for patients with recurrent prostate cancer.
The aim of the study is to verify whether a multimodal prehabilitation programme prior to robotic radical prostatectomy contributes to a faster recovery of quality of life after surgery, to better functional results (including erectile function and continence) and to less perioperative anxiety.
Based on the high expression of specific receptors on the surface of diseased tissues and neovascularization, noninvasive targeted molecular imaging can be used to visualize lesions in vitro by combining specific ligands labeled with short half-life isotopes. In this study, a novel dual-target imaging agent 68Ga-RM26-RGD was used for clinical study of tumor PET/CT imaging to further verify its clinical application value.