View clinical trials related to Thyroid Neoplasms.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate a new diagnostic imaging test, positron emission tomography (PET), with a different radioactive form of iodine called iodine-124. This form is able to accurately measure the amount of radioactive iodine uptake in the cancer. If the new test determines sufficient radioiodine uptake in the cancer, treatment will continue as usual. However, if the new test shows only low radioiodine uptake, a decision may be made that the benefit from radioiodine therapy is insufficient and that another form of therapy is preferred.
To assess the diagnostic accuracy of 18F-Fluorocholine PET/CT for the detection of medullary thyroid cancer in patients with primary and recurrent disease.
Follicular thyroid cancers are excellent prognoses. However, there is a very clear negative impact of the diagnosis on patients' quality of life, partly because of initial care. The therapeutic sequence is often the following: surgery and complementary administration of radioactive iodine 131. This treatment will destroy all thyroid cells remaining and thus minimize the risk of recurrence and facilitate future controls. Radioactive iodine uptake is optimized by stimulating thyroid cells that fix iodine better when the level of TSH is high. For this purpose, hypothyroidism is induced by weaning in hormone replacement therapy or injected with recombinant TSH. Then, a full-body scintigraphy extension is performed followed by a medical consultation. This scintigraphy shows the tissues that fixed the iodine 131, the residual tissues after surgery and / or possible distant metastases. It is recognized that when a patient learns that he has thyroid cancer, he is subject to increasing anxiety between the time of diagnosis and post-treatment scintigraphy. These patients and their loved ones are often distraught and anticipate their future in a negative way, while long-term survival is excellent. How to get these patients to consider their pathology more objectively and thus reduce their anxiety? Sophrology is a psychocorporal method aimed at balancing our emotions, thoughts and behaviors. We suppose that if these patients could benefit from a sophrological accompaniment between the announcement of the diagnosis and the scintigraphy, they could apprehend their pathology with more serenity and reality. No studies providing sophrological support to patients with thyroid cancer have been performed. The anxiety of these patients being largely linked to a feeling of isolation and excessive danger, we think that this care will have an immediate favorable effect on their anxiety, or even in the longer term on their quality of life. The aim is to offer patients a sophrological support provided by each of the 3 participating centers. These group sessions will allow them to understand the place of their future hospitalization, to share with other patients, to obtain answers to their questions, to be listened to with neutrality and empathy, and to learn management techniques. their anxiety in order to reproduce them at home. They will be followed and will not feel abandoned in the face of their distress.
Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) develops at the expense of calcitonin cells and is often characterized by lymph node metastases and sometimes visceral metastases. Improvement of preoperative diagnosis is of major importance in CMT because the quality of the initial surgery determines the prognosis. In recent years, 18F-fluorodihydroxyphenylalanine (18F-FDOPA) PET / CT was considered the most sensitive functional imaging tool in the evaluation of persistent CMT. To date, 18F-FDOPA PET at initial diagnosis has been reported in a few clinical cases. The main objective is to demonstrate that 18F-FDOPA PET provides additional information compared to conventional imaging on the initial diagnosis of CMT patients. The secondary objectives are to describe the nature of the information provided by PET / CT imaging, the main factors influencing tracer uptake and the positivity of PET / CT, and the impact of the examination on the care of the patient. This is a prospective, multicenter and open study. Patients with TCM who have serum calcitonin> 150 pg / ml at initial diagnosis and have performed baseline imaging examinations within the last 3 months will be included in the study . A PET at 18F-FDOPA will be performed according to a very powerful acquisition protocol. Image analysis will be performed blindly from the results of conventional imaging. All exams will be compared, in accordance with the gold standard. Therapeutic intentions will be collected before and after the PET imaging, as well as the actual management in place.
Participants will have been diagnosed with advanced progressive thyroid cancer and are about to start treatment with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (Lenvatinib or Sorafenib for differentiated thyroid cancer [which includes papillary thyroid cancer, follicular thyroid cancer, and poorly differentiated thyroid cancer]; and Cabozantinib or Vandetanib for medullary thyroid cancer) through adaptive (intermittent) versus conventional (continuous) regimen.
The prevalence of thyroid cancer has increased in recent decades. Patients with thyroid cancer need to choose between Thyrogen® injection and Eltroxin® withdrawal before radioiodine therapy or scan. This is a prospective, observational study, aiming to observe the difference of metabolic profiles between patients choose Thyrogen® injection and Eltroxin® withdrawal.
Introduction - Incidence of thyroid cancer has increased considerably in France in recent years, but the mortality rate has declined only slightly. Part of this increased incidence could be attributable to overdiagnosis. We aimed to estimate the contribution of overdiagnosis to the incidence of papillary thyroid cancer. Material and methods. - Incidence rates were calculated based on data from the specialised Marnes-Ardennes thyroid cancer registry, for cancers diagnosed between 1975 and 2014, by age category and by five-year period. The population was divided into two groups according to pTNM classification at diagnosis (i.e. localised or invasive). Overdiagnosis was defined as the difference in incidence rates between the invasive cancer and localised cancer groups. This rate was then divided by the incidence rate in the localised cancer group for the most recent period (2010-2014) to obtain the proportion of cancers attributable to overdiagnosis.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 3 study to compare the progression free survival, overall response rate (ORR) and safety of participants treated with Donafenib 0.3g Bid by continuous oral dosing versus placebo.
Patients in our department endoscopic thyroidectomy were randomly divided into high position and low position established operating space group established operating space group. The thyroid size, patient BMI, operation time, and intraoperative blood loss were compared between the two groups.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of lenvatinib in participants with recurrent, metastatic radio-iodine refractory differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC).