View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:The goal of this study is to learn if women of Hispanic/Latina ethnicity are willing to self-collect a cervico-vaginal sample for HPV testing. The main question the study will answer is: • Does a brief educational intervention increase the feasibility and acceptability of HPV self-sampling among Hispanic/Latina women? The study team will compare whether including a brief educational intervention with a mailed HPV self-sampling kit is more acceptable than receiving a mailed HPV self-sampling kit alone. Participants will be asked to complete surveys at study entry (baseline) and then randomized to receive only the HPV self-sampling kit, or the kit plus a small group education that meets with a bilingual health educator. Participants will then be contacted about one-month later to complete a follow-up survey. The study team will also measure the number of participants in each group who self-collect a sample and mail it in for HPV testing.
The purpose of this study was to explore the potential application of spectral CT for radiotherapy in cervical cancer.
The goal of this research study is to examine adherence to national guidelines for cervical cancer screening in women age >65. Patient surveys will provide information about women age >65 current cervical screening practices and allow researchers to compare that information to national recommended guidelines regarding cervical screenings. Provider surveys will provide information from surveyed providers about screening knowledge and current provider practices for women patients > 65 for cervical cancer. The results may be used to make future recommendations for improving gynecological care and to help develop effective strategies for ensuring guideline adherence.
Based on the Phase I trial completed by the sponsor, the Phase II clinical trial aims to investigate the effectiveness and safety of image guidance volume-modulated arc radiation therapy concurrently with Nab-Paclitaxel plus Cisplatin for patients with locally advanced cervical cancer.
Assess the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of dynamic monitoring of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) combined with circulating HPV DNA (cfHPV DNA) for early prediction of recurrence in cervical cancer post-surgery or post-treatment, and compare its advantages and disadvantages with existing diagnostic methods.
This study is a prospective, multicenter, randomized, open controlled clinical trial aimed at evaluating the effectiveness and safety of serplulimab plus chemoradiotherapy in FIGO 2018 stage III or IVA cervical squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and adenosquamous cell carcinoma patients who have not received prior treatment.
The rationale of the present study is to assess the safety of the minimally invasive surgery approach in patients meeting the SHAPE trial inclusion criteria.The SHAPE trial was designed to answer the clinical question of whether simple hysterectomy could be performed instead of radical hysterectomy in low-risk early stage cervical cancer but not the surgical approach. The favorable oncological outcome observed in SHAPE despite 75% of patients were treated with minimally invasive approach suggests that this approach may be safe. However, the trial was not designed to analyze oncological outcomes from surgical approach.
This phase II clinical study assesses the efficacy and safety of Toripalimab combined with chemoradiotherapy (CRT) followed by Toripalimab maintenance in treating high-risk locally advanced cervical cancer (HR-LACC). Despite CRT being the standard treatment, HR-LACC patients face poor survival outcomes. Toripalimab, a cost-effective PD-1 inhibitor, has shown promise in prior research. The primary endpoint is 2-year progression-free survival, with the study aiming to improve treatment accessibility and patient prognoses in China.
This study uses a hybrid Type 1 effectiveness-implementation trial to operationalize and assess the efficacy of the Health Enhancement Resource System (HERS) intervention. HERS aims to increase patient follow-up after abnormal test results through text message-based barriers counseling for women and supplemental telephone-based Health Coaching for women who miss their appointment.
Cervical cancer is caused by oncogenic, or "high-risk" (HR) human papillomavirus (HPV), and is the main cause of cancer-related death among Kenyan women. This malignancy is theoretically preventable through a combination of screening of adult women and treating those with cervical premalignancies and vaccination of children and adolescents against HPV infection. However, only 5% of Kenyan women are regularly screened, and only 14% have ever been screened, which in Kenya is done by a method known as Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA). Possible obstacles to current screening include long travel to clinics, high costs, poor sensitivity and specificity of VIA, the need for extensive training for VIA, variability among providers in their interpretation of VIA, lack of trained personnel, and others. In addition, while safe and effective HPV vaccines have been available for 15 years, very few (<1%) Kenyan children and adolescents have been vaccinated. Obstacles to vaccination include high costs, poor delivery infrastructure, lack of education, long travel to clinics, and others. The investigators began a community-based program to develop a framework for eradication of cervical cancer by screening adult women and vaccinating female children. This program is becoming accepted in the Webuye region of Western Kenya, but there is still a great deal to learn. Going forward, this initiative will be known as the Kenya Mother-Daughter Cervical Cancer Eradication Program, or the Mother-Daughter Program (MDP) for short. The investigators propose a continuation of the MDP that will allow them to accumulate additional data needed to solidify the overall project and to answer additional questions as described below. To accomplish this goal the investigators will first enroll an additional 300 adult women to the program. This will increase the strength of the analysis of HR-HPV testing in detecting premalignant lesions of the cervix, especially in HIV-infected women. Second, the investigators will identify the positive and negative features of the MDP from the viewpoint of both the adult women and the girls enrolled in the program. Third, because anogenital warts (AGWs) may serve as a reservoir for HR-HPV, especially in women living with HIV/AIDS, the investigators will examine the prevalence, HPV type distribution, and treatment of these lesions among adult women participating in the MDP.