View clinical trials related to Radiation Therapy.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to detecte and predict early subclinical cardiac damage induced by thoracic radiation therapy based on two‑dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography combined with multiple circulating biomarkers.
This investigation is designed to be a two-arm, non-randomized prospective phase 2 study evaluating the impact of medical physicist patient intervention on the anxiety level and patient satisfaction of patients undergoing a course of radiation therapy. The goal is to demonstrate that these interventions will have a significantly positive impact on the overall well-being of the oncology patients.
This study seeks to achieve two aims: - To assess the implementation of Noona software for continuous symptom monitoring for a diverse population of patients with thoracic malignancies who are undergoing radiation and - To validate remote collection of standardized PRO measures using Noona software.
Observational study to evaluate longitudinal quality of life according to standardized EORTC questionaires as well as functional Outcome, oncological outcome and toxicity in patients treated with neoadjuvant short term radiation or long-term chemoradiation followed by surgery
To determine the effectiveness of 500 cGy dose of radiation therapy vs. an untreated group in the prophylactic treatment of heterotopic ossification in distal humerus fractures
Colorectal cancer is a major cause of morbidity and mortality throughout the world and accounts for more than 9% of all cancer outcomes. Global mortality from colorectal cancer is approximately half the incidence. An estimated 394,000 colorectal cancer deaths occur worldwide each year, making colorectal cancer the fourth most common cause of cancer death. Overall survival rates after surgical resection of hepatic colorectal metastases were 10-18% higher than in patients treated with systemic therapy. Hepatic metastases occur in 45% of patients with colorectal cancer. Surgery is the standard of care for resectable diseases, with overall survival rates of 5 years (OS) of 28% -58%. Unfortunately, only 10-20% of patients have a resectable disease at the time of diagnosis. The current approach to treating nonresectable metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) promotes the use of combined cytotoxic therapy. First-line treatments include cytotoxic combinations. The role of radiotherapy in metastatic cancer is historically palliative, conventional radiotherapeutic techniques causing radiation-induced liver disease (RLID). With the advent of extracranial stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT), equivalent doses can be safely administered in 3 to 5 fractions, which can result in the removal of all affected tissues in the treated area while limiting the irradiation of the host organ and the healthy tissues surrounding the tumors. The efficacy and safety of SBRT for liver metastases has been confirmed by retrospective studies showing local control rates of about 80% or more. Retrospective studies indicate that approximately 20% of patients remain disease-free 2 to 4 years after SBRT. For patients treated with SBRT, some authors found that half of the patients had no metastatic progression or very little progression in numbers and metastasis sites. These results confirm the idea of an oligometastatic state in which aggressive local therapy could improve progression-free survival (PFS). We propose in this study to evaluate the impact of SBRT on progression-free survival in patients with mCRC with 1-3 oligometastases of the liver. Two arms will be compared: the standard arm treated with chemotherapy; to the experimental arm combining chemotherapy and SBRT. The chemotherapy will be left free at the choice of the investigator according to the recommendations of national treatments.
CAROLE seeks to evaluate the relationship between chest Radiation Therapy and coronary artery disease. The purpose of CAROLE is to check the heart health of women who received breast cancer treatments in the past and protect them from future heart disease.
After neoadjuvant chemotherapy, patients normally receive either conservative breast surgery or mastectomy followed by radiation therapy. Some patients achieve a complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Considering that radiation therapy is an effective treatment for subclinical microscopic disease, the question arises whether breast surgery before radiation therapy can be avoided in the subgroup of patients with complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Collect blood samples and associated clinical data prior to and post radiation treatment.
Collect blood samples and associated clinical data prior to, during, and post radiation treatment.