View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:The study objectives are to improve the treatment of LACC patients and to increase knowledge of the potential benefit of the plan-of-the-day concept on side effects during and after radiotherapy.
To evaluated the efficacy and safety of caldonirimab plus nimotuzumab as second-line or later therapy for recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer
This observational study is conducted to assess the value of using peripheral blood ctDNA to detect dynamic changes in HPV and genetic variants in predicting the prognosis of patients with locally advanced cervical cancer, as compared with traditional imaging and tumor markers.
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Tislelizumab combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy in the treatment of cervical cancer patients with cervical mass > 4cm and regional lymph node metastasis, paracervical invasion and regional lymph node metastasis, stage IIIA, stage IIIB, and stage IVA. To provide a clinical reference for finding a safe and effective individualized treatment plan to improve the survival prognosis of locally advanced cervical cancer patients.
This is an international, multicenter and randomized open-label phase III study designed to demonstrate, in patients with stage IIIC1 cervical cancer, whether para-aortic lymphadenectomy followed by tailored chemoradiation is associated with increased disease-free survival compared to patients staged with FDG-PET/CT only followed by chemoradiation. The planned sample size is 510; including 200 patients in France. In this trial, patients will be assigned in one of the two following treatments arms: - Arm A (control arm): Standard chemo-radiotherapy and brachytherapy according to EMBRACE II and ESGO/ESTRO recommendations. - Arm B (experimental arm): Pretherapeutic para-aortic lymphadenectomy followed by tailored chemo-radiotherapy and brachytherapy. Each patient will be followed up for 5 years. A cost-utility study will be performed in patients included in France. Other countries could be involved in this specific study. It will assess the incremental cost-utility ratio (cost per QALY gained) of para-aortic lymphadenectomy followed by tailored chemo-radiation in patients with positive PALN compared to patients staged with PET/CT only followed by chemo-radiation. This study also has ancillary objectives: - Biologic: To study T cell exhaustion, immune changes during chemoradiation, HPV ctDNA dynamic evolution, and the par-aortic lymph node as a premetastatic niche. - Radiomics: To study the contribution of radiomics and FDG-PET/CT metabolic parameters to predict para-aortic lymph node involvement and clinical outcome. - Senti-PAROLA: To evaluate the accuracy (Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value) of the para-aortic sentinel lymph node (SPA) for PALN staging, and to evaluate the prognostic value of low volume metastasis of SPA.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of different doses and administration regimens of Stimotimagene copolymerplasmid in patients with histologically confirmed diagnosis of solid tumor and/or its metastases.
Lymph node involvement is the most important negative prognostic factor in cervical cancer. Reliable preoperative lymph node assessment is of utmost importance to tailor the treatment. According to the current European guidelines local extent of the disease can be assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or by ultrasound (US), if performed by properly trained sonographer. Positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography (PET/CT) is used as a reference standard for preoperative evaluation of lymph nodes. Another technique to assess nodes combining morphological and functional characteristics is diffusion-weighted MRI (DW/MRI). While US is considered the adequate alternative to MRI in local staging of cervical cancer, there is no relevant evidence of diagnostic performace of US in nodal assessment. However, retrospective analysis of diagnostic accuracy of US from our site brought promising results. Furthermore, there are no trials prospectively investigating these three imaging methods in the same study population. The CANNES study is a prospective multicenter trial comparing diagnostic accuracy of US, PET/CT and DW/MRI in preoperative assessment of pelvic lymph nodes in cervical cancer. The study is designed to establish new standard in preoperative assessment of pelvic lymph nodes in patients with cervical cancer. Ninety-one patients will be enrolled into the study within 36 months and each of them will undergo all three imaging methods. To avoid a bias all imaging examinations will be conducted independently and blinded among sonographers, radiologists and nuclear medicine physicians. By contrast, each surgeon will have all reports from imaging available before procedure to be used as a navigation. Surgical procedures will include sentinel lymph node biopsy, debulking/sampling or systematic dissection of pelvic nodes following current European guidelines.
This is an open-label, non-randomized, Phase 1b/2 study to determine the safety and tolerability of NC410 when combined with a standard dose of pembrolizumab. This study will also assess the clinical benefit of combination therapy in participants with advanced unresectable and/or metastatic ICI refractory solid tumors OR ICI naïve MSS/MSI-low solid tumors
The American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology (ASCCP) recommended HPV testing or co-cytology testing as the standard primary approach for cervical cancer (CC) screening, which is highly sensitive for detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 or worse. However, in clinical CC screening practice, the specificity and positive predictive value of the ASCCP-recommended strategy is relatively low, which leads to excessive colposcopy and common overtreatment, especially in China with a large number of cervical cancer cases. HPV integration in the host genome is a critical step in cervical carcinogenesis and is highly specific for detection of cervical cancer. Whether HPV integration analysis can play a role in the triage of cervical cancer screening has not yet been investigated.
This is a single-arm, open-label, multicenter, phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of QL1706 in patients with recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer.