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Active clinical trials for "Breast Neoplasms"

Results 9911-9920 of 10251

Prospective Multicenter Study on Clinical Application of Sonazoid in Breast Tumor

Ultrasound

Sonazoid as a new generation of ultrasound contrast agent.This study based on the features of Sonazoid specific angiography and high mechanical index,the role of Sonazoid in the differential diagnosis of breast benign and malignant tumors was explored.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Association of Tumour Grade and Sex Steroid Receptor as a Prognostic Index in Breast Cancer

Breast Cancer

Null hypothesis: Histological grade of tumour bears no relation with the status of sex hormone receptors. Alternate hypothesis: Both the histological grade of tumour and expression of sex steroid receptors are directly related to each other The investigators aim to; see the relationship of sex steroid receptors with the histological grade of breast cancer. evaluate the efficacy of steroid receptors as a prognostic factor

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Correlation Between Molecular Typing and Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients Based...

Evaluation of the Value of Mammaprint Test Gene Variation in the Prediction of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer

This study prospectively included 150 breast cancer patients (30 patients in the first stage and 120 patients in the second stage) who were treated with the commonly used neoadjuvant chemotherapy recommended by NCCN, received surgical treatment after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and evaluated the efficacy according to the surgical pathological response.Based on the technical analysis of Mammaprint in patients with pathologic complete response (pCR), partial response and no response, we analyzed the characteristic genes related to breast cancer in tumor tissues and evaluated the accuracy and sensitivity of Mammaprint test in the efficacy of neoadjuvant chemotherapy.A new model for predicting NCT effect of breast cancer with combined risk genes and clinical parameters was established based on the clinical characteristic parameters of patients to study the accuracy and sensitivity of Mammaprint monitoring for prognosis determination of breast cancer patients.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

Genetic Characteristics of HER2 Positive Breast Cancer With Neoadjuvant TCHP Chemotherapy

HER2-positive Breast CancerChemotherapy Effect1 more

Locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) is defined as breast cancer (BC) larger than 5 centimeters or with lymph node metastasis. Usually, LABC is treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by curative surgery to reduce tumor size and eliminate micrometastasis. Response to NAC helps predict BC prognosis. Pathologic complete response (pCR), defined as no residual tumor cells after NAC, represents prolonged survival without BC recurrence and residual cancer burden score, based on residual tumor volume, and can more accurately predict BC outcomes. Especially, Human epidermal growth factor receptoor type 2(HER2)-positive breast cancer, having aggressive biologic characteristics, was mostly treated by NAC because of recent advance of highly effective targeted agents (pertuzumab and trastuzumab). However, still 30-40% of HER2-positive breast cancer did not response to NAC and underwent disease recurrence. Recently, genetic studies to find biomarker of BC prognosis have been widely performed. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), which is circulating free DNA in the blood that originates from cancers, can be detected by recently-developed technologies. CtDNA could facilitate early disease detection, diagnosis and detection of disease recurrence. CtDNA also provides a genomic profile of BC and predicts drug response. In BC, ctDNA correlates with tumor burden and provides early detection of treatment response and tumor genetic alterations. In this study, the investigator aimed to identify the correlations in genomic profile between tumors and ctDNA during NAC(docetaxel /carboplatin /trastuzumab and pertuzumab) in HER2 positive breast cancer.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Developing a Diagnostic Tool to Predict Response to Chemotherapy

Breast Cancer

Every year nearly 62,000 people are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK. One in eight women in the UK will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. The investigators are developing an inexpensive test to accurately predict how breast cancer patients will respond to the standard chemotherapy Anthracycline (AC). Only 15-20% of patients have no tumour remaining following AC, so a method of treatment selection is urgently needed. Breast cancers are currently treated with a combination of chemotherapy, targeted therapy and surgery. However, breast cancers are not identical; each tumour's individual characteristics affect how they respond to treatment. Recently the investigators discovered a new tumour characteristic, a protein which is unusually active in approximately 20% of breast cancers. It was found that a patient whose tumour showed high activity often respond well to AC, and vice versa. AC is an aggressive treatment which can potentially cause severe side effects, including a risk of permanent heart damage. It is important, therefore, to spare those patients who will not benefit from AC the physical and emotional side-effects of this drug. Currently, there is no predictive test for selecting which patients will benefit from AC and which will not. The investigators have shown that an accurate prediction can be made by testing the activity of a protein called 'SPerm associated AntiGen 5' (SPAG5) in tumour tissue. The aim is to develop a clinical SPAG5 testing kit that can be used by hospital laboratories to determine the activity of SPAG5 in the tumour. This information will help guide the choice of treatment and achieve better patient outcomes. In June 2018 the investigators started a three year National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) funded project to develop a lab test that could form the basis of a SPAG5 testing kit.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Yoga on QOL Physiological Distress&Fatigue, on Patients Affected by Breast Cancer in Adjuvant Radiotherapy...

Female Breast CancerFatigue3 more

The study aims to investigate, through serial measurements of some biomarkers, the potential mechanisms through which yoga impacts on QOL and fatigue.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

TRIple Negative Breast Cancer Markers In Liquid Biopsies Using Artificial Intelligence

Breast Cancer

Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive of breast cancers and it is usually treated with chemotherapy even before surgery. In many cases, the chemotherapy completely "melts" the tumor and these patients do well. When the tumor is not eliminated by the chemotherapy, the patient receive more chemotherapy after surgery to decrease the chances of it coming back. Yet many of these patients don't need that extra chemotherapy and will do well in any case. One of the most exciting recent developments in cancer is the use of "liquid biopsies". It turns out that the tumor's DNA, RNA and proteins can be detected in small vesicles found in the patient's blood. Thanks to advances in Artificial Intelligence, there is now informatics tools to integrate many types of molecular information. Our industrial partner, MIMs, will apply novel informatics tools to generate a test using all the molecular information obtained from blood vesicles and tissue that will be able to find out early if tumor has spread outside of the breast, and how much tumor is left after surgery. The goal is hope to develop a multi-dimensional test for TNBC patients that can be used to decide how much treatment they need and if treatment given after surgery is working.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

Examining Bioactivity of PVSRIPO in Invasive Breast Cancer

Invasive Breast Cancer

This is a pilot study to examine PVSRIPO bioactivity in tumor tissue after intratumoral administration of PVSRIPO in women with invasive breast cancer.

Unknown status33 enrollment criteria

Impact of Tumor Bed Localisation on Dosimetry Boost Irradiation in Patients Undergoing Breast Conserving...

Breast Carcinoma

PRIMARY STUDY OBJECTIVES: To evaluate dosimetric outcomes in tumor bed boost irradiation in patients undergoing breast conservative surgery using three different surgical techniques SECONDARY OBJECTIVES- Evaluation of cosmesis in patients prior to radiotherapy, at the time of completion of radiotherapy and 6 months post completion of radiotherapy STUDY DESIGN: Three arm, Prospective Observational Trial TREATMENT REGIMEN: Group A- Patients who underwent open cavity Breast Conservative surgery(BCS) Group B- Patients who underwent closed cavity BCS Group C- Patients who underwent oncoplasty All patients will first receive external beam Radiotherapy to the whole breast to a dose of 40 Grays /15#/3 weeks. The patients will then be planned for boost radiation to the tumor bed to a dose of 12.5 Grays/5#. RECRUITMENT TARGET: 20 Patients The sample size has not been calculated as this is a pilot study. Twenty patients will be accrued for the purpose of this study PRIMARY ENDPOINT Dosimetric Measurement Seroma cavity volume (ccs). PTV volume (ccs). Ratio between the PTV volumes to the whole breast volume Radiation Conformity Index (RCI) Dose Homogeneity Index (DHI) Ratio of dose received by 95% of PTV volume to the dose received by 5% of PTV volume Dose received by several normal structures; normal ipsilateral breast tissue, contralateral breast, ipsilateral lung, contralateral lung, and heart Cosmesis Measurement prior to starting radiotherapy, at the time of conclusion of radiotherapy 6 months post completion of radiotherapy

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Involvement of the Inositol-trisphosphate Receptor in Invasive or Migratory-type Breast Cancers...

Breast CancerInosine Triphosphatase

Breast cancer is the leading cause of female cancer and female death by cancer in France. Despite the improvement in early detection and therapeutic arsenal, the mortality of this cancer remains high with 11 886 deaths estimated in 2012. Breast cancer is most often a carcinoma born from the lobular or ductal epithelium and is classified In two main categories: non invasive and invasive. Invasive breast cancers account for 75% of the cases. They are usually ductal (75%) and more rarely lobular (25%). The cancer cells are then no longer circumscribed to the galactophoric canals or glands but have invaded neighboring tissues. If they are not treated in time, these cancers can then spread: the cancerous cells will then migrate either by the lymphatic vessels to reach the neighboring ganglia or through the blood vessels to give metastases in other tissues In the liver, lungs and bones). The mortality associated with breast cancer is not due to the growth of the primary tumor but rather to the occurrence of metastases. The study of the mechanisms leading to metastatic invasion (i.e. migration and invasion) is therefore of considerable importance. The development of metastases depends on the acquisition by the cancer cells of various capacities including that of being able to migrate, involving a remodeling of the cytoskeleton highly dependent on the intracellular calcium (Ca2 +) concentration. Several types of signals are able to induce mobilization of Ca2 + from the extracellular medium or endoplasmic reticulum (ER) reserves. At the intracellular level, some of these signals are generated by inositol (1,4,5) -trisphosphate (IP3) from the activation of G protein-coupled receptors or certain receptors with tyrosine kinase activity. Has been shown that the expression, activity and regulation of IP3R receptors (IP3Rs) are involved in the cancerous processes of many tissues, in particular in the phenomena of proliferation of breast cancer cells. Overall, altered expression and / or activity of IP3Rs can be used for the survival, growth, proliferation and migration of cancer cells. In the laboratory, the investigator showed that regulation of the expression of subtype 3 (IP3R3) by 17β-estradiol (E2) is involved in the growth of the human mammary cancer line MCF-7. E2 triggers the release of Ca2 + in an IP3-dependent mechanism, while prolonged exposure to E2 leads to an increase in the expression of IP3R3. At the same time, the reduction in the expression of IP3R3 cancels the proliferative effect of E2 on MCF-7 cells. More recently, the investigator has established that IP3R3 regulates the proliferation of cells of the human MCF-7 mammary cancer cell line via a molecular and functional interaction with the Ca2 + -dependent BKCa potassium channel. The determination of IP3Rs, including subtype 3, as a mediator / marker of breast carcinogenesis appears to be a major clinical issue.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria
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