Clinical Trials Logo

Thyroid Neoplasms clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Thyroid Neoplasms.

Filter by:
  • Not yet recruiting  
  • « Prev · Page 7

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: NCT00993837 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Carcinoma Clinical Trials

Feasibility of Endoscopic Thyroidectomy for Thyroid Carcinoma

Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Endoscopic thyroidectomy has been used to treat thyroid diseases in China. However, whether this technique is rational to treat thyroid carcinoma is still in controversy. The diagnosis of thyroid carcinoma is predominantly made according to intra-operative frozen section pathological examination in China. In this research, the investigators want to compare clinical index (blood loss, operation duration, number of lymph nodes dissected, complication rates, etc) between patients underwent endoscopic thyroidectomy ( total thyroidectomy) and those underwent conversion to open procedure. The investigators want to evaluate the technical feasibility of endoscopic thyroidectomy for treating thyroid carcinoma.

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.

NCT ID: NCT00385983 Not yet recruiting - Thyroid Nodule Clinical Trials

Total Thyroidectomy With Harmonic Scalpel®

Start date: n/a
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Harmonic scalpel is a new surgical instrument. Its use has been recommended in patients submitted to total thyroidectomy. Few randomized controlled trials has been published. However they had small sample sizes, used intermediate outcomes and included different surgical procedures. Our objective is to asses the use of Harmonic scalpel in patients submitted to total thyroidectomy using surgical complications, operative time, drainage volume, postoperative pain, length of stay and costs as outcomes. Our hypothesis is that Harmonic scalpel decreases operative time,drainage volume, postoperative pain, length of stay and costs without increasing surgical complications