View clinical trials related to Urinary Bladder Neoplasms.
Filter by:This study prospectively included 178 patients with bladder neoplastic lesions who planned to undergo surgery (with or without preoperative neoadjuvant chemotherapy). Inclusion criteria: Patients with pathologically confirmed bladder cancer after radical or partial cystectomy or TURBT (< 2 weeks between surgical resection and imaging). Exclusion criteria: 1) Prior history of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy; 2) No surgical resection; 3) The interval between surgical resection and imaging examination is > 2 weeks; 4) Obvious artifacts; 5)MRI scan contraindications. All subjects underwent pelvic MRI. Data was collected using a Siemens VIDA 3TMR scanner (Siemens Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany). All subjects underwent standardized scanning protocols. The obtained images are post-processed and the experimental results are analyzed statistically.
Multi-center, prospective non-interventional study to collect data on the early use of ADSTILADRIN in the US. Data will be collected from participants, caregivers and prescribing physicians in a real-world setting.
The SeARCH-trial assess the clinical impact of a molecular urine test as a 'urine-first' strategy in the diagnostic workup of patients presenting with microscopic hematuria.
A phase 1, multicenter, open label, non-randomized dose escalation and dose expansion study to examine the maximum tolerated dose, (MTD), minimum effective dose (MED) and/or recommended dose for expansion (RDE) of intratumoral ONM-501 as monotherapy and in combination with a PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor in patients with advanced solid tumors and lymphomas.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Cadonilimab(AK104) combined with Nab -Paclitaxel as first line therapy for recurrent or metastatic muscle invasive bladder. Eligible participants will receive AK104 (up to 24 months) plus Nab-Paclitaxel (for 6 cycles) until radiologic disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or withdrawal from the study, whichever occurred first. The primary endpoint is objective response rate.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test the imaging and diagnostic ability of [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8 PET/MR in bladder cancer patients with different stages. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Tumor specific lighting ability of [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8 in bladder cancer patients with different stages. - The safety of [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8. Participants will be irrigated with [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8 into the bladder for tumor imaging under PET/MR. The imaging performance of [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8 on different stages of bladder tumors will be systematically evaluated by combining with pathological sections of patients. Urine accumulation and radioactivity distribution of [68Ga]-NOTA-SGC8 will be measured. The adverse events will be recorded.
BCDx is a urine-based multi-omic assay for early cancer recurrence detection in patients with a history of bladder cancer. This prospective, blinded study evaluates its efficacy in detecting recurrent NMIBC, offering a noninvasive monitoring solution.
This is a prospective, open, single-center clinical study of RC48 combined with PD-1 and radiotherapy as bladder-preserving therapy in patients with muscular invasive bladder uroepithelial carcinoma with high HER-2 expression (IHC 2+ or 3+). The study was conducted in accordance with the Good Practice for Clinical Trials of Pharmaceutical Products (GCP). Six patients were enrolled in this study. Each patient received RC48 injection [2.0 mg/kg, Q2W, iv] and Toripalimab injection [3mg/kg, Q2W, iv] for 1~2 cycles, and radiotherapy at the second or third cycle. The total dose of bladder irradiation field was greater than 50Gy (about 30 times), and the safety monitoring of the subjects was conducted within 28 days after receiving the study drug treatment for the first time. Adverse events were graded using the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Standard for the Assessment of Common Terminology for Adverse Events (CTCAE) Version 5.0 guidelines, and the occurrence of DLT in patients was observed. If the subject does not complete the safety assessment for the tolerance observation period for non-dose tolerance reasons, a new subject will be replaced.
This single-site, non-randomized, interventional study evaluates the impact of a physical therapy consultation for patients with bladder cancer scheduled for radical cystectomy (RC). The purpose of this study is to investigate whether consultation with a physical therapist and the development of a personally tailored exercise program in the pre-cystectomy period for patients with bladder cancer will result in reduced post-operative complications, morbidity, length of inpatient stay, improve readmission 30-day and 90-day and improve 90-day mortality. This study will be partially retrospective (pre-implementation of a physical therapy consultation order) and partially prospective.
The goal of this Phase 2 trial is to evaluate a non-surgical bladder-preserving treatment mode which consists of induction chemotherapy plus anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (anti-PD-1) therapy followed by radiotherapy plus concurrent anti-PD-1 therapy. The main questions it aims to answer are: (i) whether the anti-PD-1 antibody, toripalimab, is effective in treating muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), when combined with chemoradiation; (ii) whether toripalimab is safe in combination with chemoradiation. Participants will receive 3 cycles of induction treatment containing chemotherapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin/carboplatin, plus toripalimab. Then the ones without progressive disease will receive radical radiotherapy plus 2 cycles of concurrent toripalimab.