A Study to Observe the Treatment Patterns and Outcomes of Patients in Japan With Kidney Cancer That...
Renal Cell CarcinomaA medical review chart study in Japan to describe the treatment patterns and outcomes of patients with kidney cancer that is unable to be removed by surgery or that has spread. The clinical data is to be abstracted using electronic data capture (eDC) from patient medical records in Japan.
CLE Characteristics of Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma
Urinary Tract CancerUrothelial Carcinoma1 moreRationale: Initial evaluation usually consists of cross sectional imaging of the urinary tract. When a suspect lesion is seen, an ureterorenoscopy is planned to visualize the lesion and to collect tissue for histopathology. These techniques are considered to be the gold standard in diagnosis of UTUC. CLE, a high resolution imaging technique that can be used in combination with endo-urological procedures, seems promising to improve diagnosis of urothelial cancer. CLE image characteristics for UTUC still have to be defined. Objective: With this IDEAL stage 2b explorative pilot study the investigators aim to assess in-vivo CLE image characteristics of normal urothelium, benign urothelium and urothelial carcinoma (low-grade, high-grade or CIS) of the upper urinary tract by qualitatively comparing CLE images with both histopathology from diagnostic biopsies and pathology from the therapeutic radical nephroureterectomy. Secondary objectives are the development of an imaging atlas and to assess the technical feasibility and procedure related adverse events of CLE.
Skeletal Muscle Energy Metabolism in Women With Weight Loss and Ovarian and/or Endometrial Cancer...
Weight LossOvarian Carcinoma1 morethe aim is to study skeletal muscle metabolism alterations métaboliques associated with weight loss in women with ovarian and/or endometrial cancer according to BMI.
PD-L1 Expression in Japanese Renal Cell Carcinoma Patients
Renal Cell CarcinomaThis is a multicenter retrospective study designed to compare overall survival (OS) by PD-L1 expression status in patients with RCC who have received systemic chemotherapy for recurrent or metastatic RCC, to determine whether the prognosis is worse in PD-L1-positive than in PD-L1-negative RCC. Total 600 RCC surgical specimens will be collected from patients who started systemic chemotherapy for recurrent or metastatic RCC between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2015 at about 30 participating study sites in Japan. PD-L1 expression status (IC; immune cell) on tumor-infiltrating immune cells will be evaluated by IHC, and classified by score: IC0 (PD-L1-negative) and IC1, IC2, IC3 (PD-L1-positive). Unless otherwise specified, between-group comparisons will be performed between IC0 and IC1/2/3.
Direct Acting Antiviral-Post Authorization Safety Study
Hepatitis CHepatocellular CarcinomaThis is an independent optional sub-study parallel to TARGET-HCC (NCT02954094). The purpose of Direct-Acting Antiviral-Post Authorization Safety Study (DAA-PASS) is to investigate the impact of exposure to direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) on early recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients following successful HCC treatment interventions.
DCE-MRI for Assessment of Response to TACE of HCC
CarcinomaHepatocellularThis study is conducted to evaluate dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI to quantify the efficacy of trans-arterial chemoembolization by comparing imaging results before and after treatment for at least one hepatic tumor and to look at blow flow curves of the free-breathing MRI before treatment.
Comparative Effectiveness of Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy for Ductal Carcinoma In Situ
Ductal Carcinoma In SituPatients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) treated with available therapies have experienced excellent outcomes and very low mortality rates due to the disease's non-invasive nature. However, considerable debate exists as to how the DCIS lesion should be treated. As a result, determining strategies to manage DCIS has been identified as a research priority. The role of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) for DCIS management is controversial in general and needs further scrutiny. Our study addresses this evidence gap as the investigators propose a retrospective cohort study to investigate the outcome of SLNB among DCIS patients. Specifically, the investigators will compare the outcomes, including survival outcomes and treatment side effects, among women older than 67 years of age with DCIS receiving SLNB vs. not receiving SLNB within 6 months of DCIS diagnosis. The investigators have two primary aims in this study: Aim 1: the investigators select our study sample using SEER-Medicare database. The investigators will determine associations between SLNB and acute/subacute side effects, including lymphedema, pain, and limitation of movement of upper extremity from the first breast conserving surgery to 9 months post-diagnosis. Aim 2: the investigators will determine associations between SLNB and long-term outcomes, including breast cancer specific mortality, ipsilateral invasive breast cancer diagnosis, subsequent mastectomy as treated recurrence, and lasting side effects, from >9 months post-diagnosis to death or the end of this study period. Given the nature of our observational study design, the investigators will apply standard multivariate analyses and propensity score methodology to reduce the influence from confounders. The investigators will control for patient demographics, comorbidities, functional status, tumor characteristics, and prior healthcare utilization. Using distance to the nearest provider that uses SLNB for DCIS or surgeon's tendency in using SLNB for stage I/II breast cancer, the investigators also plan to conduct instrument variable analyses if necessary. Stratifying patients by key DCIS characteristics (including grade, comedonecrosis, and tumor size) and their predicted life expectancy (given their age and comorbidities), the investigators also hope to identify patient subgroups who may safely forgo SLNB. The study would provide evidence on the efficacy and safety outcome of SLNB for DCIS management.
TACE-HAIC Combined With TKIs and Immunotherapy Versus TACE Alone for Hepatocellular Carcinoma With...
Hepatocellular CarcinomaHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is characterized with vascular invasion, particularly of the portal vein, resulting in portal vein tumor thrombus (PVTT) in 10%-40% of HCC patients at the time of HCC diagnosis. The prognosis of these patients is extremely poor.Treatment efficacy and safety using a combined therapy (TACE-HAIC combined with TKIs and PD-1 inhibitors) were compared with TACE alone in treatment of HCC patients with PVTT.
Pharmacogenetic Study in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients.
Hepatocellular Carcinomaevaluate the prognostic value of genetic polymorphisms in HCC Egyptian patients undergoing TACE using lipiodol and doxorubicin.
Postoperative Adjuvant Therapy of HCC Based on PD-1
Hepatocellular CarcinomaRFSFor the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma, liver resection is still one of the optimal options, but the recurrence rate is as high as 70% five years after the operation, and the prognosis of patients with high-risk recurrence factors such as portal vein tumor thrombus and microvascular invasion is even worse, so it is particularly urgent to find effective postoperative adjuvant treatment. The role of PD-1 inhibitors in preventing the postoperative recurrence of HCC requires further study.