View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:External radiation given in 25 fractions or so together with weekly chemotherapy and followed by 5 or 6 fractions of brachytherapy is the standard of care for patients with locally advanced cervical cancer. We hope to develop external moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy of cervical cancer based on adaptive radiotherapy.The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and treatment-related toxicity of moderately hypofractionated adaptive radiotherapy in the treatment of cervical cancer.
Objective: To explore the efficacy, safety and tolerability of BL-B01D1, SI-B003 and BL-B01D1+SI-B003 in patients with recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer and other gynecological malignancies, and to further explore the optimal dose and mode of combination.
Aim: The aim of this study is to reveal the effect of education given to women about cervical cancer on knowledge, attitude and belief. Material and Method: This randomized controlled study was conducted with 130 who had a public hospital located in Southeast Turkey (51 experimental, 51 control).
This study is a dynamically adjustable prospective longitudinal study designed to capture biospecimen (biopsy, blood, surgical) and multimodal treatment (imaging, dosimetry, clinical) data before, during, and after treatment with definitive-intent standard of care (SOC) radiotherapy for patients with locally advanced cervical and pancreatic cancer.
The main objective of this study is to evaluate the interest of a screening strategy based on the HPV test in patients living with HIV, compared to the cell smear alone in the same population. The Secondary objective of this study is to verify if the use of HPV testing could allow for a longer follow-up of these patients in case of negativity, and thus allow for a standardization of clinicians' practices.
Investigators will test the effectiveness of adaptive strategies on timely adoption of cervical cancer treatment in Botswana using a pragmatic trial design.
Cervical cancer CC is the most common malignant tumor in the female reproductive system, seriously endangering women's health and life, and is one of the leading causes of death for women worldwide.Globally, HPV causes about 85% of cervical cancers and about 60% of oropharyngeal cancers, causing more than 500,000 cancers each year.ctDNA is a potential biomarker because it contains tumor-specific genetic and epigenetic abnormalities that can be used in cancer diagnosis and prognosis prediction.MRD is considered a promising prognostic marker that can be used to identify individuals at increased risk of recurrence and individuals who may benefit from treatment.The expression level of MRD and plasma HPV before and after radiotherapy and chemotherapy for cervical cancer was analyzed by liquid biopsy ctDNA detection technology, which predicted the efficacy of cervical cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy, which was helpful for monitoring and estimating the risk of disease recurrence after cervical cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and verified the expression of MRD and plasma HPV as the basis for adjuvant chemotherapy after cervical cancer radiotherapy and the basis for optimal chemotherapy time node selection.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test curcumin as an adjunct treatment in patients with cervical cancer receiving standard-of-care palliative radiation. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Is adding curcumin to standard-of-care palliative radiotherapy of cervical cancer patients safe? - Does adding curcumin to standard-of-care palliative radiotherapy of cervical cancer patients improve therapeutic responses? - How much curcumin is absorbed into the body and how long will it stay in the body? Participants will: - Take two 500 mg curcumin capsules twice per day for 4-6 weeks in addition to the prescribed palliative radiotherapy. - Provide blood and urine samples for laboratory tests. - Provide blood samples to measure curcumin levels in their body. - Obtain CT-scan to measure their tumor response. - Complete questioners to measure improvements to their quality of life, if any.
The purpose of this trial is to evaluate a new drug, HTL0039732, that will be administered on its own (as a monotherapy) and in combination with atezolizumab or with other approved anti-cancer therapies, in participants with advanced solid tumours.
The management of locally advanced cervical cancer (Figo >IB) is based on radiochemotherapy (RCT) followed by brachytherapy. At present there is no personalized treatment, all patients undergoing radiochemotherapy will follow a conventional treatment by external radiotherapy (46 Gy in 23 sessions associated with cisplatin (CDDP) weekly) and brachytherapy to achieve a total equivalent biological dose around 80-90 Gy).The efficacy of this treatment has been proven for most patients, almost 80% being in complete response after RCT. Nevertheless, on an individual scale, there remains a significant variation in the tumor response, with patients who respond from the first week of treatment, "early responders" or, on the contrary, others who present significant tumor residues after external beam radiotherapy.Various macroscopic tumor volume (GTV) response patterns have been identified based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at diagnosis and MRI before brachytherapy, implying very different clinical target volumes for brachytherapy technique. The difference in tumor volume response has been identified as having a major impact on treatment response. This is the first study attempting to evaluate tumor response in real time during radiochemotherapy treatment. Knowing the tumor response during treatment will make it possible to modify the management of locally advanced cervical cancer, several therapeutic options might then be discussed depending on the early response to treatment: dose de-escalation for early responders, reduction of time total treatment, personalization of brachytherapy management (technique and dose). This observational study will allow rapid identification of responder and non-responder patients and might be used as a basis for personalized treatment strategies