View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:Determine the efficacy and safety of turmeric in the treatment of patients with advanced cervical cancer. Efficacy will be determined through radiological and histopathological criteria through the rate of response to treatment, duration of response, the rate of objective response and disease control, as well as overall survival and disease-free survival. The safety of therapy will be evaluated according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) classification
In this study, safety and feasibility of MR-guided HIFU hyperthermia application will be assessed in patients diagnosed with locally advanced cervical cancer. This site has reasonable soft tissue pathways and depths for the ultrasound to access with limited osseous or air interference. Additionally, of cervical cancer patients who develop recurrence following standard treatment, approximately 1/3 will recur locally and an additional 1/3 recur both locally and distantly. Risk of local failure increases with higher FIGO staging. Therefore, patients with locally advanced cervical cancer stand to benefit from adjuvant hyperthermia to potentially increase local disease control outcomes. While MR-HIFU may conceivably increase risk for local complications such as fistula formation, these risks are felt to be acceptable given the potential morbidity of local disease failure, which often can only be addressed curatively by pelvic exenteration. In this study, testing will be performed within tumor volumes involving the cervix uteri. Heating will be to the therapeutic level of 41-42°C for 30-60 minutes, a commonly utilized therapeutic target. This session duration will be achieved in either a single session either before or after the radiotherapy fraction or in an optional two sessions of 15-30 minutes both before and after the radiotherapy fraction, for a total time of 30-60 minutes one day per week. This study will help to elucidate the feasibility of achieving and maintaining therapeutic hyperthermia within an entire tumor volume over the goal period of time of 30-60 minutes. The investigators anticipate that successful completion of this study will lead to further clinical trials investigating the treatment efficacy in terms of added local control compared to traditional, standard-of-care radiotherapy.
This pilot clinical trial studies how well web-based coping and communication skills intervention works in improving psychological adaptation in patients with gynecological cancer. Web-based intervention, such as coping and communication skills intervention, may help doctors to get a better understanding of ways to help gynecological cancer patients cope with their cancer experience.
This phase II trial studies how well standard chemotherapy and radiation therapy given with or without paclitaxel and carboplatin work in treating human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive women with cervical cancer that has spread to nearby tissue or lymph nodes. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as cisplatin, paclitaxel, and carboplatin work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells. They may either kill the cancer cells by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Radiation therapy to the pelvis destroys potential cancer cells in the pelvic area and significantly reduces the risk of tumor recurrence in the pelvic area. It is not yet known if giving chemotherapy and radiation therapy with paclitaxel and carboplatin afterward may work better than than just chemotherapy and radiation therapy in treating HIV-positive patients with advanced cervical cancer.
To evaluate the efficacy of PARP inhibitor, rucaparib as maintenance therapy for locally advanced cervical cancer
The purpose of this study is to find out whether patients with cervical cancer treated with about a new radiation technique called "stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) have less stress and anxiety compared to standard brachytherapy radiation. With standard brachytherapy radiation, metal hardware is placed through the vagina and into the uterus, which can cause pain and discomfort. SBRT is a new radiation technique that is non-invasive and does not require the insertion of any metal hardware.
This study will help to elucidate the treatment sites in the extremities and pelvis for which MR-guided HIFU heating is feasible, which has the potential to be beneficial for patients with conditions at those sites (soft tissue sarcoma, cervical cancer, etc.). The investigators anticipate that successful completion of this study will lead to clinical trials in those feasible sites of interest to determine the safety and efficacy of administering therapeutic levels of heat for hyperthermia or other applications.
This is an international, prospective, multicenter and randomized phase III study designed to determine if patients with locally advanced cervical cancer have longer overall survivals with pretherapeutic paraaortic surgical staging when compared to radiologic staging.
The aim of this study is to assess the potential benefit of the addition of immunotherapy with VGX-3100 and INO-9012 (i.e. INO-3112) to concomitant CRT or, to concomitant CRT and continued as adjuvant in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer. Safety run-in: To test the safety of CRT combined with immunotherapy with INO-3112. This safety run-in phase will include the first 3 patients treated in each of the two INO-3112 combination arms who are exposed to at least two immunotherapy doses and evaluate whether the combination does not pose undue immediate risks to the patients further enrolled in the trial. Phase II:To demonstrate sufficient activity in the experimental combination arms to warrant a further phase III conclusive trial based on progression free survival (PFS) at 18 months assessed by RECIST by the local investigator. The efficacy will be assessed within each experimental arm while the standard arm will serve as a reference arm to check the reliability of the results.
The goal of this clinical research study is to learn if the combination of topotecan and pazopanib can help to control recurrent cervical cancer. The safety of the study drug combination will also be studied.