View clinical trials related to Urinary Bladder Neoplasms.
Filter by:A multi-center, randomized, open-label, parallel-controlled Phase Ⅲ clinical trial to evaluate the clinical safety and efficacy of APL-1202 as a single-agent oral treatment versus intravesical instillation of Epirubicin hydrochloride in naïve intermediate-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) patients
This is a phase II study to determine the safety and efficacy of tislelizumab when given in combination with nab-paclitaxel as treatment for patients with high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (HR NMIBC) which is not completely resectable. Patients will receive treatment with tislelizumab in combination with nab-paclitaxel every 3 weeks for 4 treatment cycles over 12 weeks followed by transurethral resection biopsy.
Evaluate the impact of 18F-FDG-PET-CT on the staging of patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer. Based on the results of 2 18F-FDG-PET-CT's patients are stratified in non-metastatic, oligometastatic and polymetastatic bladder cancer patients and the treatment is adapted accordingly to improve overall survival.
To facilitate the follow-up of urothelial tumors and also make them more tolerable and less invasive for patients, there is a minimally invasive and easy to perform examination which is urinary cytology on 3 samples. This test is extremely specific, over 90% chance of cancer if it is positive and is performed by expert cytopathologists, but it is burdened by a very low sensitivity, which is especially acute in the case of low grade tumors. This makes it an extremely useful test in case of positivity, but of little use if negative or doubtful, not being able to consider it reliable. To overcome this problem, our study aims to bring an approach based on a physical principle, that is spectroscopy, which is fast non-invasive and does not require the use of additional substances or contrast media in the diagnosis of urothelial neoplasms in samples of urine. In our experience, multimodal optical fiber spectroscopy has proved extremely valid in discriminating healthy urothelial tissue from tumor ex vivo, as well as providing important information on the degree of urothelial neoplasia, with accuracy rates higher than 80%, for which developed the idea of a technique based on multimodal spectroscopy. If our method proves valid, it could improve the follow up and management of patients with urothelial cancer, being able to support normal cytology and provide further support to the cytopathologist, as well as simplify the diagnosis.
INTRODUCTION Bladder tumor is the second most common neoplasm in the genitourinary tract. Most cases of ex novo diagnosis of bladder cancers are present as non-invasive muscle tumors, which are treatable through endourological procedures. The current standard is based on conventional transurethral resection of bladder tumor, although high rates of recurrence have been reported following resection of the primary tumor. Given the importance of a correct initial diagnosis in these cases, en bloc transurethral resection has developed over the past 2 decades. This technique was born, according to the literature, with 3 main objectives: to improve the quality of the surgical piece for its anatomopathological reading, reduce the rate of postoperative complications and reduce the rate of relapses in the surgical bed. This technique is used as a common practice of tumor resection in other centers and has been shown in multiple publications that it does not increase surgical risk or negatively affect cancer results. OBJECTIVE The objective of our study is to compare feasibility, perioperative complication rate, accuracy of staging and recurrence/progression rates when performing en bloc resection by means of different energies: monopolar, bipolar and laser energy. MATERIAL AND METHODS Between April 2018 and June 2021, a prospective randomized study will be conducted including patients undergoing a transurethral resection of initial or recurrent bladder tumor, either unifocal or multifocal. Patients with tumors less than 3 cm and with less than 3 tumors shall be included if multiple. Patients with more than 3 tumors or tumors over 3cm, those with evidence of invasive muscle tumor(cT2) or those with evidence of remote metastasis, whether lymphatic or organic, will be excluded. Patients will be randomized into two groups: - Group 1 (test): en bloc resection (n-180). It will be divided into 3 subgroups according to the energy used (monopolar, bipolar, laser energy). - Group 2 (control): Conventional transurethral resection (n-120). It will be divided into 2 subgroups depending on the energy used (monopolar or bipolar). A fact sheet will be given to the patient about the study and the signature of the informed consent will be requested in order to be included. The patient will be free to leave the study at any time without having to provide any justification and without affecting the treatment, intervention and follow-up that must be carried out. The processing and storage of samples will be carried out in the pathological anatomy laboratory, according to standard clinical practice. Patients will be monitored according to the usual clinical practice protocol (minimum 5-year follow-up), included in the non-muscle invasive bladder tumor protocols of the Puigvert Foundation.
This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of bladder intravesical Camrelizumab in patients with high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer who failed BCG therapy.
This research study is examining the effectiveness of pembrolizumab plus cryoablation or aveluma plus cryoablation on people with urothelial carcinoma, including bladder cancer, that has spread.
The most frequent cancer of the urinary tract is the bladder cancer (BC), in Italy its incidence reaches the 7% of all the new diagnosis of cancer, accounting for the fifth cause of death in the western countries, overall 140.000 new cases per year in Europe. In the year 2017, the Italian association for medical oncology (AIOM) recorded in our country about 21.700 new diagnosis of BC men and 5.300 in women. This data show not only a relevant gender disparity on the disease incidence (in 5th to 7th decade male incidence: 11-12% of all new diagnosis of cancer versus 1% in women) but also on the outcomes of treatment. Overall, the 30% of all the new diagnosis have a muscle-invasive (MIBC) onset, the female gender suffer a correlation with a more advanced disease at the time of first diagnosis. As a consequence, men have lower BC-related mortality when compared to women (p<0,001). This discrepancy in the mortality rate has been investigated by many authors, resulting in the evidence that female gender suffers higher risks, especially during the first two-years after the radical cystectomy. A comprehensive explanation has not been formulated yet, but a multiplicity of cofactors, including variations in the hormone receptors and tumor biology as well as the different anatomy between male and female, have been identified as potentially relevant. Another important issue in the pre-operatory management of female patients with BC is the misleading interpretation of hematuria. It seems to directly correlate with the evidence that women suffer a more advanced stage at diagnosis, and this element has been withheld in the list of relevant risk factors for prognosis. Nevertheless, a thorough analysis of their effect will only be possible in the future, as well-designed prospective and randomized clinical trials are currently not available. A part from the preoperatory disparity, it has also been described that men are more frequently candidates to an orthotopic urinary diversion, leading female patients to an irreversibly altered perception of personal integrity and body image, namely to a lower quality of life after radical cystectomy. The female anatomy has been considered as a limitation to continence recovery, resulting in preoperative counselling more frequently against in favor of ileal conduit or not-continent urinary diversions.
Purpose: to demonstrate a 10% recurrence risk reduction for patients treated with Hypersal versus normal saline immediately following TURBT. Design: prospective randomized double-blind placebo controlled trial. Outline: eligible patients with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer who undergo TURBT at our center will be randomized to receive either 40ml of normal saline or 40 ml of hypersal intravesically. The primary endpoint is tumor recurrence rate. Secondary endpoint are time to recurrence and side effects. Patients A total of 150 patients will be enrolled in this trial.
The investigators hypothesize that omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFAs) might have a role in prevention of the recurrence of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). The patients who are suffering from high-risk NMIBC will be randomly allocated into two groups: The first group (n-3 PUFAs group): 55 patients will receive omega-3 plus twice daily for one year after transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT). The second group (Control group): 55 patients will receive placebo twice daily for one year after TURBT. All patients will receive intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) immunotherapy and they will be followed up for two years. The chemopreventive effect of n-3 PUFAs on the recurrence of NMIBC after TURBT will be studied via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), inpatient cystoscopy, histopathological examination and molecular studies of the resected bladder tissues.