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Soft Tissue Sarcoma clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Soft Tissue Sarcoma.

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NCT ID: NCT02367924 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of Trabectedin (Yondelis®) in Patients With Advanced Soft Tissue Sarcoma

YonSar
Start date: July 16, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Efficacy and safety of trabectedin in real-life practice, routinely used for the management of advanced sarcoma after failure of anthracyclines and ifosfamide or patients unsuited to receive these drugs in Germany. Trabectedin is indicated for the treatment of patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma, after failure of anthracyclines and ifosfamide, or who are unsuited to receive these agents. Efficacy data are based mainly on liposarcoma and leiomyosarcoma patients.

NCT ID: NCT02301039 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

SARC028: A Phase II Study of the Anti-PD1 Antibody Pembrolizumab (MK-3475) in Patients With Advanced Sarcomas

Start date: March 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of pembrolizumab in patients with advanced sarcomas.

NCT ID: NCT02300545 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Pazopanib as Front-Line Therapy in Patients With Non-Resectable or Metastatic Soft Tissue Sarcomas Who Are Not Candidates for Chemotherapy

Start date: April 8, 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Pazopanib is FDA approved as a second line and beyond treatment for metastatic soft tissue sarcoma. There is a population of elderly and debilitated soft tissue sarcoma patients that are not fit for standard first line chemotherapy that is doxorubicin based. As pazopanib is well tolerated with minimal side effects, the investigators propose a phase II study to evaluate pazopanib as a first-line agent in patients with non-resectable or metastatic disease who are not candidates for cytotoxic chemotherapy.

NCT ID: NCT02270086 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Evaluating Bacterial Response in Sarcoma Management Using Fluorescence Imaging

Start date: August 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The investigators have recently developed an innovative optical molecular imaging platform (called PRODIGI) based on high-resolution fluorescence and white-light technologies in a hand-held, real-time, high-resolution, non-invasive format. PRODIGI offers a non-contact means of obtaining instantaneous image-based measurements of diagnostically-relevant biological and molecular information of a wound and surrounding skin tissues for the first time and could have significant impact on improving conventional wound care, management, and guidance of intervention. In preliminary preclinical testing, the investigators have discovered that when wounds are illuminated by violet/blue light, endogenous collagen in the connective tissue matrix emit a characteristic green fluorescent signal, while most pathogenic bacterial species emit a unique red fluorescence signal due to the production of endogenous porphyrins. Therefore, with autofluorescence imaging, no exogenous contrast agents are needed during imaging, making this approach particularly appealing as a diagnostic imaging method for clinical use. In the context of this study, PRODIGI is used to assess wound complications in patients diagnosed with soft tissue sarcoma and treated with pre-operative radiotherapy. Both pre- and postoperative external beam radiotherapy combined with limb salvage surgery have similarly high rates of local control in the management of extremity soft tissue sarcoma. The main acute side effect associated with preoperative radiotherapy is wound healing complications. Wound care overall is a major clinical challenge and presents an enormous burden to health care worldwide. The objective of this clinical study is to determine if PRODIGI coupled with an optical tracking platform has clinical utility in identifying, quantitatively measuring and longitudinally tracking bacterial imbalance on the patient's intact skin surface at the location of the surgical resection site for adult patients with lower limb soft tissue sarcoma treated with preoperative intensity-modulated radiation therapy and limb salvage surgery and, further, to investigate whether this bacterial imbalance is related to radiotherapy dose and wound complications.

NCT ID: NCT02267083 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety Study of GPX-150 to Treat Soft Tissue Sarcoma

Start date: January 7, 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will assess the safety and efficacy of GPX-150 administered intravenously every 3 weeks in the treatment of patients with soft tissue sarcoma.

NCT ID: NCT02204111 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Patient Directed Intervention to Improve the Quality of Life for Patients With Soft Tissue Sarcoma

YonLife
Start date: September 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The primary objective of the study is to compare quality of life (QoL) between patients suffering from soft tissue sarcoma, receiving a multidimensional intervention with those receiving standard treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02192333 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Survivorship Care in Reducing Symptoms in Young Adult Cancer Survivors

Start date: August 3, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized clinical trial studies survivorship care in reducing symptoms in young adult cancer survivors. Survivorship care programs that identify the needs of young adult cancer survivors and ways to support them through the years after treatment may help reduce symptoms, such as pain, fatigue, sleep disturbance, depression, and distress, in young adult cancer survivors.

NCT ID: NCT02080897 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

Evaluating Quality of Life in Patients With Soft Tissue Sarcoma Presenting With Metastatic Lung Disease

Start date: March 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of palliative surgery in improving Quality of Life (QoL) and symptom control for patients who present with a Soft Tissue Sarcoma (STS) and metastatic lung disease. Responses to clinical Edmonton Symptom Assessment System - Sarcoma Modified ( ESAS-SM) questionnaire for patients who have undergone surgery for resection of the primary tumour will be compared to those that are unable to have surgery. Data collected from this questionnaire can highlight the benefits in patients' QoL who receive palliative surgical resection, and whether these benefits surmount those who are not treated with palliative surgery.

NCT ID: NCT01896778 Completed - Melanoma Clinical Trials

Body Warming in Improving Blood Flow and Oxygen Delivery to Tumors in Patients With Cancer

Start date: October 4, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized pilot clinical trial studies body warming in improving blood flow and oxygen delivery to tumors in patients with cancer. Heating tumor cells to several degrees above normal body temperature may kill tumor cells.

NCT ID: NCT01861951 Completed - Soft Tissue Sarcoma Clinical Trials

A Trial Comparing Two Medications as First Treatment in Elderly Patients With Metastatic or Advanced Soft Tissue Sarcoma

EPAZ
Start date: October 2012
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Patients with a locally advanced or metastatic (i.e., there are already metastases of the diagnosed tumor in the body outside the primary lesion) soft tissue sarcoma will be recruited for this study. The minimum age to enter the study is 60 years. Therapy with doxorubicin is the mainstay of palliative chemotherapy for these patients, which is associated with hematological toxicity and an increase of the infection rate. Pazopanib is known to rarely induce hematological toxicity or to trigger infection. We therefore assume that pazopanib exerts similar activity while decreasing neutropenia and neutropenic fever. Pazopanib is already approved in the U.S. and Europe for the treatment of advanced soft tissue sarcoma. Doxorubicin and pazopanib will be randomly allocated to either receive doxorubicin or pazopanib in a phase II clinical trial. The aim of this study is to measure the treatment effect (reduction in tumor size or tumor stabilization) for both drugs, as well as the survival rate, and the duration of tumor control by the different therapies. A further objective is to measure the quality of life by standardized questionnaires throughout the course of treatment.