View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Neoplasms.
Filter by:It is a cluster randomized control trial to assess the effectiveness of the cervical cancer stigma reduction intervention on cancer stigma score and cervical cancer screening uptake in Nepal
Longitudinal study in two referral centers in Morocco to evaluate the effectiveness, the acceptability and safety of thermal ablation in the treatment of cervical neoplasia.
Opioid Free Anesthesia (OFA) is a multimodal anesthesia and emerging technique that spares the use of opioids and involve other adjuvant anesthetics, which have demonstrated in vitro influence on immunologic and inflammatory response, as well as in metastatic progression. For these reasons we believe that OFA may positively influence in oncologic patients postoperative recovery and in its disease progression.
The primary aim of the study explore drivers of cervical cancer screening and barriers contributing to low screening coverage among women in South Africa. Secondary aims are determining preferences for cervical cancer prevention services using a discrete choice experiment and developing a multi-level package of interventions that will address barriers to cervical cancer screening and improve engagement in care among women.
Through a prospective, randomized and controlled research design method, this study implemented intermittent catheterization for patients with urinary dysfunction after postoperative radiotherapy of cervical cancer, formulated a reasonable bladder rehabilitation training plan, reduced the amount of residual urine, restored bladder function as soon as possible, reduced the incidence of urinary complications and readmission rate, and improved the quality of life of patients, To comprehensively evaluate the application value of intermittent catheterization in patients with micturition dysfunction after postoperative radiotherapy for cervical cancer.
When a woman has an abnormal pap smear or tests positive for a high risk strain of the HPV virus, the current standard of care includes culposcopic examination of the cervix with biopsy. A culposcope is essentially a microscope for examining the cervix. Culposcopes cost $5-10,000 each. The device being tested in this trial is an adaptor for a smart phone that will cost ~ $125. The larger goal of this line of studies see if the images obtained using the smart phone adaptor are non-inferior to those obtained with standard culposcopes. If the device is found to provide images equal to those of standard culposscopes, it could save thousands of dollars in healthcare expenditure currently that go to the purchase and maintenance of culposcopes. This has potential world-wide applications, especially for resource poor countries. This initial trial is a non-inferiority trial to compare the images obtained with the smart phone based device of those obtained by a standard culposcope
This research, a quasi-experimental study based on the comparison of the pre-test and post-test results of individuals in a single group is conducted to raise awareness about cervical cancer in women aged 18-65 years. The questionnaire includes 32 questions about the individual's socio-demographic characteristics, pregnancy, and sexual life information, cervical cancer, pap-smear test, and HPV vaccine information, as well as a 27-item 3-point likert type to measure cervical cancer risk factors, symptoms, and prevention. A survey form consisting of 61 questions, consisting of 2 questions and 2 guestions for evaluating the animated training video, and an informative animated training video of 4 minutes and 33 seconds constituted the data collection tools. During the Covid-19 pandemic, the study has completed with 433 people who participated voluntarily by directing the participants via online platforms (WhatsApp / Instagram / E-mail) using the snowball sampling method of survey applications. The women who participated in the research completed the first part by watching the informative animated training video at the end of the questionnaire form.
Cervical cancer represents the second commonest cancer in women worldwide, with 500,000 new cases and 300,000 deaths reported yearly. Among cervical cancer cases, 80% occur in developing countries and about 70% are identified as advanced cancer. According to the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) staging system, a locally advanced cervical cancer includes stage IB2 to IIB. Treatment modalities include radical surgery with or without adjuvant radiotherapy (RT), Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy (NAC) plus radical hysterectomy with or without adjuvant RT, and concomitant chemo radiation. Currently, platinum based concurrent chemoradiotherapy is the gold standard for locally advanced cervical carcinoma. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy has many advantages: decreasing tumor size making surgery easier with improved rate of complete resection, decreased pelvic recurrence rate significantly, decreasing rate of parametrial invasion and lymph node metastasis, better brachytherapy distribution, minimal radiation toxicity, and 15% absolute increase of 5-year survival. This study will evaluate various factors i.e. patient related (Age, Menopausal status, HPV, HIV, Comorbidities), Tumor related pathological stages (TNM), grade, lymphovascular perineural invasion, lymph nodes, extranodal extension, tumor margins including radial margin, type of tumor i.e. Adeno vs squamous, mutation profile and Treatment related factors (type of NAC, duration of NAC, no of cycles of NAC).
In this study, 5 subjects will be enrolled and the cumulative D2cc dose for rectum during brachytherapy will be recorded as the primary outcome measures.
The Pocket colposcope has 510k FDA clearance and has been successfully used in almost 1500 unique patients globally in Duke and non-Duke protocols to date. The objective is to provide colposcopy capability to rural communities in Peru potentially using Telehealth. Approximately 10,000 women will receive self HPV test kit for community health workers. Of these participants, approximately 1,000 HPV+ participants will be invited to participate in this pocket colposcopy study. Approximately 500 of these participants may require treatment using thermocoagulation.