Clinical Trials Logo

Psychologic Stress clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Psychologic Stress.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05109468 Recruiting - Anxiety Clinical Trials

Assessment of Patients' Quality of Sexual Life After Anal Cancer Treatment

SEQUOIA
Start date: June 6, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this this study, to evaluate the quality of sexual life of patients treated for anal cancer treated by radiotherapy, during their treatment, then 3 months after treatment and, finally, 2 years after treatment. cancer diagnosis.

NCT ID: NCT04475354 Recruiting - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Distress In CErvical Cancer Patients and Partners

DICE
Start date: November 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Rationale: A growing number of cervical cancer patients live years beyond their cancer diagnosis and ultimately survive their disease. Cervical cancer patients report higher levels of psychological distress compared to other (gynecological) cancer types, resulting in physical and psychosocial limitations. The mechanisms explaining why some patients do, and others do not experience persistent psychological distress after cervical cancer remain unclear. Objective: Gain insight into the mechanisms explaining psychological distress (i.e. anxiety, depression, cancer worry, perceived stress) in a prospective population-based sample of cervical cancer patients. Factors to be studied include characteristics of the individual (demographical and clinical, including comorbidities), characteristics of the environment ((sexual) relationships), biological function (cortisol, melatonin and sex hormone production assessed in scalp hair, inflammation and telomere length assessed in blood, overall quality of life (EORTC QLQ-C30), symptoms (EORTC QLQ-CX24), functional status (physical activity and sleep measured using the Actigraph activity tracker, and food intake measured using the online 'Eetmeter'), and general health perceptions (B-IPQ). The second aim is to assess the impact of cervical cancer on partners' distress (cancer worry, illness perceptions, relationship quality, dyadic coping).