View clinical trials related to Recurrence.
Filter by:This study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of Folfox4 chemotherapy regimen to prevent early recurrence for hepatocellular carcinoma patients with portal vein tumor thrombus following curative resection
The aim of this study is to explore the effect of Transarterial Chemoembolization (TACE) on the prognosis of patients with microvascular invasion presence(MVI) and overexpression of Aspartate-β-hydroxylase(ASPH).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of prophylactic intravesical chemotherapy (different chemotherapy drugs and dosage regimen) in the prevention of bladder recurrence after nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC).
The aim of this study is to confirmed the role of intraoperative controlled release 5-Fluorouracil therapy in the prevention of recurrence after surgery for HCC patients with high risk of preoperative prediction of microvascular invasion.
Clinical experience has shown that metastasis can often be limited in number and location, and thus amenable to local treatment. The term oligometastasis describes an intermediate state of cancer spread between localized disease and widespread metastasis. The implication of such an intermediate state is that the disease can be cured by using metastasis-directed therapy. Historically, in some patients with oligometastases in the liver or lungs, surgical resection was often indicated, as abundant evidence suggested it could improve progression-free or overall survival. Recently, several studies have reported promising outcomes of >80% local control with Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) in patients with lung or liver oligometastases. Nonetheless, very few studies have focused on non-liver, non-lung extracranial oligometastatic lesions treated with SBRT, and such studies have limitations of a retrospective nature and small sample sizes.Because allmost studies are based on single-arm studies without appropriate controls, the level of evidence to support SBRT is weak. Randomized trials are therefore necessary to establish the utility of SBRT for oligometastatic disease. This study is designed as a randomized phase II study. Patients will be randomized between current standard treatment (Arm 1) versus standard treatment +SBRT (Arm 2) to all known disease.
PSA-recurrence prostate carcinoma is associated with two general problems. 1. Localisation of PSA-recurrence is unconfident. In many cases it's not clear if a local, locoregional oder systemic relapse is available. 2. There is no standard therapy proved by randomised clinical trials. Recommended radiotherapy starting with PSA-value < 0.5 ng/ml according to german S3 guidelines is based on retrospective data. These difficulties may lead to a therapy potentially not adapted to patients situation of disease.This study aims to randomised examine if an instant radiotherapy of prostate PSA-recurrence (PSA-value between 0.2 - 0.99 ng/ml) or a delayed radiotherapy with additional imaging (PSA value >= 1 ng/ml) including PET/CT and bone scintigraphy for reliable information about tumor location and expansion is beneficial regarding therapy efficiency, quality of life and social economic aspects.
The main purpose of our study is to assess the effect of a lifestyle intervention combining weight control, diet and physical activity on the risk of recurrences among breast cancer patients with non-metastatic tumours in terms of 5-year cumulative incidence of recurences.
Ovarian endometriotic cyst (endometrioma) is one of the most common endometriotic lesions, and conservative laparoscopic surgery is the treatment of choice. However, the recurrence after surgery is common. As repetitive surgery leads to morbidities and ovarian function decrease, recurrence after surgery frustrates both patients and clinicians. In this aspect, medical treatments have been offered after surgery to prevent or delay the recurrence. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) is frequently used in women with advanced endometriosis, but the efficacy is rather controversial. On the other hand, it has been demonstrated that oral contraceptives (OCs) could reduce or delay endometrioma recurrence, but data are still limited. Consequently, no one type of postoperative medical therapy has been shown to be superior in reducing the recurrence of endometrioma. The rationale of postoperative medical therapy is that it could eradicate microscopic lesions which were not found and not treated sufficiently during surgery. Therefore, the maintenance of strongly suppressed condition induced by postoperative GnRHa treatment by addition of OCs could be a promising treatment to prevent the recurrence, but it has not been widely investigated. We performed this retrospective cohort study to evaluate the efficacy of cyclic monophasic low-dose OCs as a maintenance therapy after GnRHa treatment for the suppression of endometrioma recurrence.