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Active clinical trials for "Uterine Cervical Neoplasms"

Results 331-340 of 1335

Effect of an Anti-inflammatory Diet on Patients With Cervical Cancer

Cervical CancerUterine Cervical Neoplasm3 more

During radiation therapy (RT) to pelvic tumors, the small intestine, colon and rectum are inevitably included in the radiation field and are healthy tissues that suffer damage as an adverse effect. Pelvic radiation disease (PRD) is the group of gastrointestinal symptoms experienced by patients that receive pelvic radiation. Intestinal inflammation, tissue damage, oxidative stress and tumor metabolism lead the patient to a catabolic state associated with an increase in energy demands. Also, the painful abdominal symptoms restrict the patients' food intake, leading the patients that develop PRD to an increased risk to develop protein-energy malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies, all of which affect the patients' quality of life. Studies developed in patients with inflammatory bowel disease have suggested that probiotics may have an anti-inflammatory effect in the intestine. In addition, micronutrients and trace elements provide antioxidant capacity and exert immune-modulating effects during periods of intestinal inflammation. Thus, probiotics and immune-modulating nutrients may provide a means to diminish intestinal inflammation and symptoms associated with PRD. In this project the investigators propose that the nutritional management of cervical cancer patients be based on an anti-inflammatory diet, taking into account the nutritional status, age, comorbidities that the patient may present and symptoms developed during treatment. The nutritional intervention will include food rich in immune-modulating nutrients: omega-3 fatty acids, soluble fiber, antioxidants and polyphenols, and probiotics.

Active16 enrollment criteria

Predictive Assays In Cervix Cancer

Cervical Cancer

The experiments outlined in this proposal will compare a number of currently available techniques for assessing hypoxia and interstitial fluid pressures in patients with cervix cancer. The aim of these experiments is to establish the relationship of the clinically relevant outcome measures of tumour control and survival following radiation therapy with these biological characteristics of carcinoma of the cervix relevant to tumour hypoxia. These characteristics will be assessed in patients undergoing treatment using techniques which have reached an appropriate level of development for clinical evaluation and aim to determine the best technique for determining these parameters of the tumour microenvironment. A number of novel strategies directed at the microenvironment are undergoing or soon will be undergoing clinical evaluation and selection of appropriate patients for these trials is of great importance.

Active7 enrollment criteria

COL Immunotherapy Before Radiochimio + Ipilimumab

Cervix Cancer

This is a multicenter, single arm pilot study evaluating the biological impact of "Nivolumab + Ipilimumab" in patients with cervical squamous cell carcinoma requiring RT-CT as initial therapy

Active47 enrollment criteria

Improving Patient and Caregiver Understanding of Risks and Benefits of Immunotherapy for Advanced...

Stage IV MelanomaAdvanced Lung Cancer20 more

The purpose of this study is to refine and pilot test educational material developed to educate and support patients receiving immunotherapy for advanced cancer. The intervention is an educational video and question prompt list (QPL) to promote communication between patients, caregivers, and the oncology team about the risks and benefits of immunotherapy.

Active13 enrollment criteria

A Randomized Study to Compare a Hydrogel Packing System to Standard Packing During HDR Brachytherapy...

Cervical Cancer

In this study, a new, low cost packing system ("BrachyGel VHPS") is being tested as a packing option during brachytherapy along with standard options to make sure that it keeps the unrelated organs away from radiation at least as well as the standard options, and to better understand the safety and patient discomfort associated with BrachyGel VHPS and the standard packing options.

Active12 enrollment criteria

Studying the Physical Function and Quality of Life Before and After Surgery in Patients With Stage...

Cervical AdenocarcinomaCervical Adenosquamous Carcinoma5 more

This clinical trial studies the physical function and quality-of-life before and after surgery in patients with stage I cervical cancer. Studying quality-of-life in patients undergoing surgery for cervical cancer may help determine the intermediate-term and long-term effects of surgery.

Active13 enrollment criteria

FDG-PET and Circulating HPV in Patients With Cervical Cancer

Cervical Cancer

The addition of concurrent chemotherapy to definitive radiation has improved the 5-year survival of women with locally advanced cervical cancer to 58%. To determine if plasma HPV DNA predates clinical recurrence and/or improves the accuracy of metabolic response on FDG-PET at 3 months post completion of radical chemo-radiation in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer. Post therapy FDG-PET can help predict progression free survival and overall survival. In addition plasma HPV can be used to monitor response and detect early recurrence. Prospective study will recruit 20 patients with locally advanced cervical cancer to determine if plasma HPV DNA predates clinical recurrence and/or improves the accuracy response on post-therapy FDG-PET scan at 3 months.

Active14 enrollment criteria

A Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Preliminary Efficacy of KRC-01

Cervical Cancer

This is a seamless Phase 1/2 study consisting of two components. Phase 1 component is a dose-escalation, single arm, open label study in 10 patients to evaluate the safety and tolerability of KRC 01. Phase 2 component is a randomized, open label, controlled, multi-center study in 60 patients to evaluate the preliminary antitumor effect of KRC-01 in combination with CRT.

Not yet recruiting25 enrollment criteria

mSaada: A Mobile Health Tool

Cervical CancerHPV1 more

In the R21 phase of this project, investigators will: (1) work with key stakeholders and local and international developers to finalize the mSaada platform, building on the existing prototype to add patient and specimen tracking functionality; and (2) carry out a pilot cluster randomized controlled trial (c-RCT) to identify the patient, provider and health system factors necessary to design a trial to evaluate mSaada effectiveness and implementation factors. Investigators will carry out a six-month c-RCT of mSaada in six health facilities providing HPV-based screening, and use performance metrics including system usage rates, workflow observations and qualitative data to guide the planning of a c-RCT to determine effectiveness. In the R33 phase of the project, investigators plan to: (1) conduct an 18-month c-RCT across 12 health facilities to determine the impact of mSaada on cervical cancer screening uptake, treatment acquisition and cervical cancer knowledge levels among women in the community; and (2) measure the requisite implementation factors for mSaada effectiveness, sustainability, and scale-up. The rigorous study design will allow us to determine the clinical impact of mSaada, ensure the local and regional infrastructure has the capacity necessary for sustainability and develop strategies for widespread implementation and scale-up. Collaboration with key stakeholders from the Kenya Ministry of Health will facilitate the development of a long-term sustainability plan as the country moves toward HPV-based cervical cancer screening. Investigators anticipate the mSaada platform will play a pivotal role in facilitating the introduction of HPV-based screening programs that can reach women in settings with limited health care infrastructure.

Not yet recruiting31 enrollment criteria

Promise Women Project

Human Papilloma VirusCervical Cancer

The goal of this study is to develop and test an intervention program to improve cervical cancer prevention among Muslim American women. The main questions the investigators aim to answer are: Will the religiously tailored and culturally appropriate intervention program improve participants' knowledge and acceptance of cervical cancer prevention? Is the intervention program feasible to conduct and acceptable to participants? Participants will be asked to: Attend focus group sessions to provide input on the development of educational materials. Complete pre- and post-intervention surveys to measure changes in knowledge and acceptance of cervical cancer prevention. Engage in the intervention program, which includes education and experiential practice/communication skills training. Provide feedback through satisfaction surveys. Researchers will compare participant outcomes before and after the intervention to assess its effectiveness. Additionally, the program's feasibility and acceptability will be evaluated based on enrollment rates, successful implementation, participant engagement, retention, and satisfaction.

Not yet recruiting10 enrollment criteria
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