View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is an exploratory, open label, multi-center trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of combination of durvalumab with BVAC-C in patients with cervical cancer refractory to or relapse after platinum-based first-line chemotherapy with safety lead-in phase. The study consists of 2 parts: part A, a safety lead-in phase, and part B, an exploratory safety and efficacy evaluation phase. Part A will be conducted as a 3+3 dose escalation manner, and part B will be conducted as a non-randomized single arm study. •Part A: Open-labeled; 3+3 dose-escalation; Multi-center; safety lead-in phase •Part B: Open-labeled; Non-randomized, Single arm; Multi-center, efficacy evaluation phase
To determine the safety and efficacy of Sindilimab combined with Paclitaxel and Cisplatin in neoadjuvant chemotherapy for Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer
This is a study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of TQB2450 injection in the treatment of PD-L1 positive recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer.
Problem Description When cervical cancer screening is needed, the Pap test (or Pap smears) is still the most common, although there are challenges that continue to prevent effective screening services in many countries, poor quality testing, long delays until screening is available, they give the results to women, poor population coverage and insufficient follow-up treatment. HPV testing can remove barriers related to access to screening services, since the woman can obtain the sample herself. Women's self-sampling for HPV testing has been used in a programmatic context in some countries. For a good impact, screening coverage must reach at least 70% of the target population. In the Region of the Americas, only seven countries have reported this level of coverage, so there is a great need for improvement. Several factors make it difficult to improve coverage: most screening programs are unorganized, available mainly in urban areas, and based on the Pap test, which has been shown to have low sensitivity, limited and requires multiple consultations. However, screening alone is not enough to prevent cervical cancer. Follow-up treatment of women with abnormal screening test results is necessary and remains a challenge. Main objective To evaluate the effectiveness of cervicovaginal self-test in comparison with direct sampling by the service provider, for the identification of HR-HPV DNA via real-time PCTR and triage with dual staining biomarker p16 & ki67. Methodology Under inclusion and exclusion criteria and signed informed consent, cervical sample will be taken with the corresponding method according to the randomization (self-test or service provider) and certify that the device did not cause damage or lacerations in the vaginal canal. In addition, an acceptability survey will be completed. All women with positive p16 & ki67 will be referred for colposcopy and biopsy. Patients will be informed her results with a specialist physician for guidance and indications. Clinical study design is crossover, monocentric, randomized, open, and non-inferiority. Statistical differences between self-test and service rpovider will be assesed.
The standard treatment of stage Ibl 2-4 cm cervical cancer in women who wish to preserve fertility is an abdominal radical trachelectomy with pelvic lymph node dissection. Since the number of take home babies after completing this procedure is below 10%, there is a need for exploration of alternative treatment modalities with better chances of preserving fertility at equal risk of recurrence. Aim of the study is to assess the feasibility of preserving fertility in women with 2018 FIGO stage IB2 cervical cancer with lesions measuring >2cm - <4cm
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of anti-PD-1 (toripalimab) combined with cisplatin concurrent IMRT for locally advanced cervical cancer.
This is a single institute, single-arm, interventional trial to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) followed by Tegafur, Gimeracil and Oteracil Potassium Capsules consolidation chemotherapy in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer.
The purpose of this study is to see if curcumin can suppress HPV infection in women with low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (LSIL) disease or treated high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL) disease. This study plans to explore the effect of curcumin as a potential medical treatment in HIV-uninfected and infected women with mild precancerous lesions of the cervix or recently treated high-grade precancerous lesions at risk for persistent HPV infection. About 200 women with low-grade precancerous lesions of the cervix or recently treated high-grade precancerous lesions will be enrolled to either insert 2000 mg of curcumin capsules in their vagina once a week or placebo after undergoing colposcopy or loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP). They will have a repeat visit in 6 months where they will undergo a Pap smear and HPV test to determine if there are higher rates of HPV clearance after curcumin administration. If HPV is present or the Pap smear is abnormal, patients will then undergo colposcopic examination to evaluate cervical histology.
Biop system's safety and performance in increased detection of High-Grade lesions of the cervical epithelium in women scheduled for colposcopy
Transgender men are individuals born genetically female that have a gender identity that is incongruent with their biological sex. For those who have begun or completed transition, they may present as males but still have a uterus and cervix. Thus far, no distinction has been made between routine cervical cancer screening guidelines in non-transgender women and those for transgender men, despite wide variations in sexual practices, including lifelong vaginal abstinence. The purpose of this study is to offer transgender men seen at clinic visits self-collected HPV testing to evaluate for improved cervical cancer screening rates, as well as a survey to further investigate sexual practices, rates of appropriate screening prior to being offered self-collection, and barriers to obtaining appropriate care.