View clinical trials related to Thyroid Diseases.
Filter by:Patients admitted to the hospital with acute illness may have a wide spectrum of thyroid function abnormalities. It is largely unknown whether such aberrations are temporary or persist for a long time, and whether they impact prognosis of such patients.
A prospective cohort of papillary thyroid carcinoma(PTC), patients who received thermal ablation in our hospital since February 2023 was established as the study object. Preoperative and postoperative demographic data, ultrasonography, other relevant laboratory tests, and thyroid disease-related scales such as fatigue, depression, and stress were collected. The influencing factors of PTC recurrence were analyzed.
An observational cross-sectional case-control study on the postoperative quality of life (5 aspects, general quality of life, thyroid specific quality of life, scar appearance, voice and swallowing functions) of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) patients underwent thyroid lobectomy via different approach, open vs trans-axillary. The patients are recruited in Peking Union Medical College Hospital (PUMCH) from 2020 to 2023 and are evaluated by follow-up with both outpatient visits and questionnaires made up of 9 validated scales.
The aim of this study is to develop a standardized and user-independent imaging workflow model for autofluorescence and quantified fluorescence angiography with Indocyanine Green (ICG) of the parathyroid glands of children. For this purpose, all pediatric patients will undergo thyroid surgery with the use of autofluorescence and quantified ICG-fluorescence. This study could be the first step in reducing the rate of postoperative hypocalcemia in children, by using fluorescence angiography during pediatric thyroid surgery.
This window of opportunity trial is studying a checkpoint inhibitor agent to treat differentiated thyroid cancer in a neoadjuvant setting. A checkpoint inhibitor is a compound aimed at restoring tumor immunosurveillance. The name of this agent is pembrolizumab.
Despite use of meticulous surgical techniques and regardless of surgical access via conventional open or endoscopy, postoperative adhesions develop in the vast majority of patients undergoing neck surgery. Such adhesions represent not only adhesion reformation at sites of adhesiolysis, but also de novo adhesion formation at sites of surgical procedures. Improved understanding of the pathophysiology of adhesion development and distinguishing variations in the molecular biologic mechanisms represent future opportunities to improve the reduction of postoperative adhesions. After surgical tissue injury, there were local release of histamine, cytokines, and growth factors that lead to adhesion development. Other than survival or safety issues, cosmetics concerns and quality of life are the motifs after thyroid surgeries currently. Pos-thyroidectomy adhesions include various symptoms such as neck discomfort, neck tightness, skin adhesion to the trachea, skin scarring from adhesive reaction, and vocal cord palsy or impairment of laryngeal vertical movement. Relief of the adhesion through wound massage or anti-adhesion agents could reduce neck discomfort and voice changes.Although oxidized regenerated cellulose (ORC) and hyaluronic acid (HA) appeared to be safe and effective to decrease the incidence of adhesions, to improve adhesion-related neck discomfort, and to prevent skin adhesion to the trachea after neck surgery. The application of antiadhesive barriers after neck surgery is safe but the effect is still uncertain. Thus, we aim to confirm the antiadhesive effect of multiple antiadhesive barriers in thyroid/parathyroid surgery.
Thyroid carcinoma (TC) is the most common endocrine malignancy, affecting 0.2-1.5% of individuals worldwide. The rising incidence rate of TC is mostly related to the expanding use of high-quality imaging techniques, with an increase in the detection of thyroid nodules. Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) is the most accurate, rapid, safe, and cost-effective test for the evaluation of thyroid nodules, with high specificity and sensitivity. Nevertheless, FNAC is particularly unreliable in differentiating between benign and malignant nodules that fall under the category of indeterminate thyroid nodules (class III and class IV according to Bethesda Classification[2]). In fact, in these cases, the expected malignancy rates are 5-15% and 15-30%, respectively. Thus, most patients with indeterminate thyroid nodules undergo an operation that is indeed unnecessary, while representing a risk for surgical complications and a cost for health-care systems. We aim to evaluate different approaches to indeterminate nodules across different countries in the world.
Although most thyroid cancers are treated and cured successfully there are still 30% who recur after many years. This will eventually progress and at this point may become incurable with treatment options including complex and high risk surgery. The overall efficacy of systemic treatment in advanced thyroid cancer has a good initial response in most patients but not all. The study will collect tissues and blood samples for various protein analysis, nucleic acid extraction and live cell analysis in order to try and detect the presence of plasma ctDNA at baseline of eligible patients.
This is a real world study aiming to observe the efficacy and safety of Anlotinib capsules in patients with advanced medullary thyroid carcinoma, and to summarize the treatment experience in a broad population of patients.
The purpose of this study was to explore the changes of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with locally advanced thyroid cancer (LATC) receiving TKI drugs (anlotinib, lenvatinib, etc.).