View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:The investigators will collect PAP-test samples from women undergoing colposcopy. Laboratory providers will prepare the samples with a liquid-based cytology method. The providers will then digitalise the slides using a digital scanner. The slides will be sent to cytopathologists who will assess the quality of the slides.
Global elimination of cervical cancer is a feasible goal; however, the countries with the greatest disease burden also have the greatest healthcare system challenges. Cervical cancer (CC) is almost entirely preventable, yet, it remains the 2nd most common cause of cancer and is the most common cause of cancer deaths among women in the majority of Low-Middle-Income-Countries (LMIC) including Kenya. Effective low-cost interventions for early detection of pre-cancer lesions have been available but there remains very low coverage with about 16% eligible women screened in Kenya. Cryotherapy has been introduced as a low-cost intervention for treatment of pre-cancer lesions, however, challenges with equipment shortage, costs, supply chain difficulties of refrigerant gas and equipment failure health facilities has been cited as a reason for the low treatment rates of screen positive women. In Kenya only about 30% of women screening positive access treatment for the pre-cancer lesions. This project will introduce thermal ablation (TA), which is proven to be safe and as effective as cryotherapy for treatment of pre-cancer lesions of the cervix. TA uses electricity, batteries or solar to charge, takes a shorter time to use, is a small easily portable equipment. The primary aim of the study is to deliver, evaluate and cost implementation of the 'Single Visit Screen and Treat with Thermal Ablation' (SVA-SAT+TA) intervention for treatment of women who screen positive for pre-cancer lesions of the cervix in reproductive health clinics in Kenya, using implementation science framework to inform National scale-up. To achieve national and global goals to eliminate cervical cancer, there is an urgent need to adapt, implement, and scale-up effective technologies in Kenya. The proposed research project will develop a contextually appropriate implementation and dissemination model to guide effective scale-up of the single visit screen and treat approach with use of thermal ablation to health facilities to bridge access to cervical cancer prevention services for women in Kenya and similar low resource settings.
This study offers Hispanic women who are eligible for cervical cancer screening residing in the Cleveland metropolitan area one of two possible community outreach-based cervical cancer screening modalities, self-collection home HPV test or clinic-based pap test, which is the current standard of care, to assess if these strategies improve cervical cancer screening rates in this population group.
As a phase I clinical research,this study plans to evaluate the safety and tolerability of CD70-targeting CAR-T cells in the treatment of CD70-positive advanced/metastatic solid tumors, and obtain recommended doses and infusion patterns.
This is a phase 0 clinical trial of molecular biomarkers in women with uterine cervix cancer. Women receive standard-of-care radiochemotherapy followed by brachytherapy. Blood samples are obtained to detect circulating levels of deoxyribonucleotides, human papillomavirus DNA, and circulating tumor cells.
This study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter phase III clinical study in 498 patients with persistent, recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer.Experimental: QL1706 + Chemotherapy (Paclitaxel-cisplatin/Carboplatin) ± Bevacizumab; Control group: placebo + chemotherapy (paclitaxel-cisplatin/carboplatin) ± bevacizumab
This is a prospective, single arm, phase II clinical study on the treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer (Ⅱ B to Ⅳ a) with Zimberelimab combined with concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
This study is a prospective, multicenter and randomized clinical trial (DEBULK trial) to determine the therapeutic effect of surgical debulking of bulky or multiple lymph nodes before concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) in cervical cancer stage IIICr.
This is a phase I clinical study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of CAR-T in patients with CD70-positive advanced/metastatic solid tumors, and to obtain the maximum tolerated dose of CAR-T and phase II Recommended dose.
The purpose of this study explores the usefulness of urine samples for cervical cancer screening in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected women. Cervical cancer occurs when women are infected with the human papillomavirus (HPV), which can cause changes in the cells that lead to cervical precancer and, eventually, cervical cancer if untreated. However, urine HPV testing has not been well validated low- and middle-income country settings, with no data available to guide its use in HIV-infected women.