View clinical trials related to Urothelial Carcinoma.
Filter by:A national, multicenter, non-randomized, retrospective, observational study (Real-World Evidence-RWE) aimed at analyzing clinical presentation profiles and demographic characteristics of patients with early urothelial bladder cancer (high-risk non-muscle invasive and localized muscle-invasive) treated with standard therapies in national cancer treatment reference centers within the last 6 years (between 2017 and 2022).
This is a non-randomized two arm open-label phase 2 pilot study in adult subjects with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer. The study will investigate an alternative administration schedule of EV given as monotherapy and in combination with pembrolizumab.
This is a prospective, open, single center clinical study of vidicizumab combined with local radiotherapy as bladder conserving therapy in patients with muscle invasive bladder urothelium cancer with HER-2 expression (IHC 2+or 3+). A total of 30 subjects were included in the study
This study will enroll participants with urothelial cancer (UC). UC can include cancer of the bladder, kidney, or the tubes that carry pee through the body (ureter, urethra). This study will try to find out if the drugs disitamab vedotin with pembrolizumab works better than platinum-containing chemotherapy to treat patients with UC. This study will also test what side effects happen when participants take these drugs together. A side effect is anything a drug does to the body besides treating the disease. Participants in this study will have cancer that has spread through the body (metastatic) or spread near where it started (locally advanced). In this study, there are 2 different groups. Participants will be assigned to a group randomly. Participants in the disitamab vedotin arm will get the study drug disitamab vedotin once every two weeks and pembrolizumab once every 6 weeks. Participants in the standard of care arm will get gemcitabine once a week for 2 weeks with either cisplatin or carboplatin once every 3 weeks.
This study is being done to learn about urothelial cancers that make HER2 and how that affects treatment choices for participants with urothelial cancer. During this study, the medical and health records of participants will be reviewed to learn more about their health. Participants will have urothelial cancer that has grown in the body near where it started (locally advanced) and cannot be removed (unresectable) or has spread through the body (metastatic).
The main purpose of this study is to test the safety and tolerability of naptumomab estafenatox (NAP), the planned experimental (investigational) drug, in combination with pembrolizumab following a single pretreatment with Obinutuzumab (Obi), and determine its side effects and effects on urothelial cancer. It is hypothesized that adding NAP will make pembrolizumab more effective. Participants will receive 2 infusions of Obi prior to the treatment of NAP in combination with pembrolizumab. This treatment is given in 21-day cycles for 6 cycles with NAP administered daily for 4 consecutive days, Days 1-4, + pembrolizumab given on day 2 of each cycle. After these six cycles of therapy, participants will continue to receive pembrolizumab every 3 weeks, without NAP, for a total number of up to 34 pembrolizumab administrations since cycle 1. After the treatment of Obi is completed, participants will start NAP in combination with pembrolizumab and continue that treatment in a 28 day cycle period. NAP will be given for a total of 6 cycles and pembrolizumab will be given every 21 days for a total of up to 2 years. After stopping treatment, participants have follow-up visits or phone calls about every 12 weeks until the study is closed.
Hematuria is recognized as an important sigh of potential urinary tract malignancy. Therefore, understanding the disease processes and discovering the potential urothelial carcinoma (UC) underlying this important sign is critical. Cystoscopy, urine cytology and imaging are most reliable methods for UC diagnosis, but certain drawbacks exist for these methods, such as invasiveness or inaccuracy. Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a hallmark of human cancer, and it's related with tumor stage and grade. Previous research has proved that analyzing CIN of the DNA extracted from urothelial cells in urine samples seems a promising method for detecting UC. Here we intend to assess CIN's performance for hematuria evaluation.
It is of current debate whether the use of invasive (referring to a process that requires insertion into the body) standard of care procedures such as a cystoscopy which is a procedure to look inside the bladder using a thin camera called a cystoscope, is appropriate for use in patients with microscopic hematuria or blood in urine invisible to the naked eye. This is because the risk of disease (bladder cancer - urothelial carcinoma) is relatively low in this population group, approximately 3%. Invasive procedures such as a cystoscopy comes with anxiety and pain, in addition to other potential side effects. This has resulted in low admittance in urology clinics for cystoscopy with hematuria (blood in urine) patients. Therefore, there is a need for a more simple, non-invasive test that can accurately detect the presence or absence of disease (urothelial carcinoma) in patients with microscopic hematuria. There is a potential role Cxbladder, a non-invasive, urine based test, can fill this role.
The purpose of this registry is to evaluate real world experience and outcomes of patients with Upper Tract Urothelial Cancer (UTUC) treated with Jelmyto in the United States.
The purpose of this study is to find out whether the study drug, enfortumab vedotin, is an effective and safe treatment for people who have urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract. Study participants will be people who are not eligible to receive or have chosen not to receive the chemotherapy drug cisplatin for treatment of their cancer. In addition, all participants will be planning on having standard surgery to remove their tumor.