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Thyroid Cancer clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04141306 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Radioiodine-avid Bone Metastases From Thyroid Cancer Without Structural Abnormality

Start date: November 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Bone radioiodine (RAI) uptake without structural abnormality in thyroid cancer (TC) patients may be related to false positive or to microscopic foci of metastatic tissue. In such cases, outcome is reported to be excellent. Indeed, Robenshtok et al. reported a serie of patients with RAI-avid bone metastases of TC without structural abnormality on imaging studies who have more favorable long-term prognosis than those harbouring structurally visible bone metastases and do not undergo skeletal-related complications. The investigators report the case of Mrs D., who had been operated for a pathologic tumor stage 3: pT3(m) poorly differentiated TC at the age of 43. The first post-therapeutic whole body scan revealed 3 foci of bone uptake (right clavicle, L2, L3). The elevated level of thyroglobulin (157ng/mL) favoured the hypothesis of bone metastases despite the absence of any structural lesion on CT and MRI. She received 7 courses of radioiodine therapy. The right clavicle RAI uptake persisted, and subsequent CT disclosed an osteolytic lesion which was treated by radiofrequency and external beam radiation. Twenty-five years after the diagnosis, she has a persistent morphological disease with a 30x8mm progressive lesion on the right clavicle, for which surgery is planned. The aim of the present study is to describe the natural history and evolution of radioiodine avid bone metastases from thyroid cancer without structural abnormalities and to identify prognosis factors.

NCT ID: NCT04128631 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Thyroid Cancer and (FDG)PET/CT Scan

Start date: October 30, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Background and Rational (Introduction) Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) have favorable prognosis. Overall 10-year survival is 93% for papillary carcinoma, and 85% for follicular carcinoma(1). After total thyroidectomy followed by radioiodine remnant ablation, DTC patients are screened for recurrence by measuring the levels of both Tg and TgAb and I-131 whole body scan (WBS) in the follow-up (2) It is reported that elevated TgAb may indicate the recurrent and/or metastatic disease and can be used as an alternative of the tumor marker for DTC . The I-131 WBS has high specificity to detect recurrence (50 to 60% in papillary thyroid carcinoma and 64 to 67% in follicular thyroid carcinoma) (3,4). The I-131WBS showed negative finding in 10 to 15% of patients with detectable serum Tg levels(5). Two factors may account for discrepancy between serum Tg and I-131 WBS . First, the tumor size might be too small to be detected by WBS. Second, the tumor cell may lose the ability to trap radioiodine while still able to secret Tg(6,7). It becomes necessary to investigate with other modalities to identify possible residual disease to initiate the appropriate treatment. (8) Positron emission tomography with 2-deoxy-2-[fluorine-18]fluoro- D-glucose integrated with computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) has emerged as a powerful imaging tool for the detection of various cancers. (9) The combined acquisition of PET and CT has synergistic advantages over PET or CT alone and minimizes their individual limitations. (10) It is a valuable tool for staging and re staging of some tumors and has an important role in the detection of recurrence in asymptomatic patients with rising tumor marker levels and patients with negative or equivocal findings on conventional imaging techniques.(11) Aim of the study The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of (PET/CT) in patients with suspected thyroid cancer recurrence or metastasis , with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) patients who show elevated serum thyroglobulin (Tg) or antithyroglobulin antibody (TgAb) level with negative radioiodine whole body scan (I-WBS).

NCT ID: NCT04040673 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

RAman For Thyroid cancER

RAFTER
Start date: June 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Ex vivo vibrational spectroscopy (VS), including Raman spectroscopy (RS) of thyroid tissue samples, collected from patients undergoing routine diagnostic thyroid biopsies for diagnosis of potential thyroid cancer. Raman spectra are to be correlated with consensus histopathology and clinical outcomes. Multivariate analysis to be used to evaluate the classification accuracy of VS ex vivo.

NCT ID: NCT03978351 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

The Role of Midkine in Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer

Start date: September 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

1. Evaluation of the role of serum midkine in differentiating malignant from benign thyroid nodule 2. studying the level of serum midkine in relation to different thyroid cancer stages

NCT ID: NCT03510143 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Effect of Polyglycolic Acid Mesh (Neoveil) in Thyroid Cancer Surgery

Start date: May 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a randomized controlled study to investigate the effect of "Polyglycolic Acid Mesh Sheet (NeoveilTM)" on the thyroid cancer surgery.

NCT ID: NCT03469544 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Long Non Coding RNA HOTAIR and Midkine as Biomarkers in Thyroid Cancer

Start date: March 29, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Thyroid cancer is the most prevalent endocrine malignancy.Papillary thyroid carcinomas and follicular thyroid carcinomas account for 95% of all thyroid cancer cases. They are clinically classified as well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas due to their biological behavior resembling normal follicular cells and good responsiveness to surgery and radioiodine therapy . However, they are usually curable when discovered at early stages, but survival rates may be reduced from 100% in stages I and II to 50% at stage IV So,early detection is the key for successful treatment and reduction of mortality. pathological analysis by fine-needle aspiration biopsies has some limitations including difficulty in sampling small tumors, inconclusive diagnosis in up to 35% of patients and bleeding. Thus, biomarkers for diagnosis are needed.

NCT ID: NCT03006289 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Relationship of Metabolic Syndrome and Its Components With Thyroid Cancer

Start date: December 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to investigate the association between metabolic syndrome (MS), body mass index (BMI), hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia, hypertension and thyroid cancer. Screen for the risk factors that affect the incidence of thyroid cancer.

NCT ID: NCT01043107 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Relationship Between Computer and Cancer

Start date: February 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Thyroid Cancer is one of the most common malignant carcinomas. The incidence of thyroid cancer has risen in the past years. The recrudesce rate is highly raised. Computer is widely used by people nowadays, is it a predisposing factor to the highly raised recrudesce rate? This research observed two random assigned groups, in which the patients were diagnosed by pathologic results. One group were strictly prohibit with using computer, the other were not told. Finally collect the recrudesce rate of each group, analyze the data by statistic software.

NCT ID: NCT00435851 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

Medico-Economic Comparison of Four Strategies of Radioiodine Ablation in Thyroid Carcinoma Patients

Estimabl
Start date: February 2007
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

In France, 3,700 new cases of thyroid cancer are diagnosed each year. Differentiated thyroid carcinoma represents more than 90% of all thyroid cancers; and has a 10-year survival of 90-95% of patients. This favorable prognosis is the result of an effective primary therapy, which consists of a total thyroidectomy that is followed by radio-iodine ablation with 3,7GBq (100mCi) in case of significant risk of persistent disease. Few centers investigated the possibility to administer lower doses of 131I (1GBq, 30 mCi), in order to limit the potential long-term adverse complications for patients and to respond to radioprotection rules for family members and medical staff. Radio-iodine ablation requires TSH stimulation, which was historically achieved by thyroid hormone withdrawal for 3 to 5 weeks. During this period, patients suffered from symptoms of hypothyroidism. The recombinant human TSH (rhTSH, Thyrogen®, Genzyme Therapeutics, Cambridge, USA) was approved in Europe in 2005 as an alternative stimulation procedure to withdrawal during ablation. It allows patients to remain euthyroid on thyroid hormone therapy (that needs not to be withdrawn). However, this a costly drug (800 € per patient), whose economic efficiency needs to be checked.