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Active clinical trials for "Fibrocystic Breast Disease"

Results 21-29 of 29

A Comparison of Breast Tomosynthesis Mammography and Conventional Breast Imaging in the Characterization...

Fibrocystic Disease of BreastBreast Cancer

The purpose of this study is to compare conventional breast imaging and diagnostic work-up (2 dimensional imaging) to digital breast tomosynthesis (3 dimensional imaging) in the appearance of non-calcified breast masses. It is thought that non-calcified breast masses will be better visualized with the new 3D technology.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

China CellSearch Study

Metastatic Breast CancerBenign Breast Disease

The study is designed to confirm the current indication (below) of the CellSearch® Circulating Tumor Cell Kit in metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients for use of the kit in China. The CellSearch® Circulating Tumor Cell Kit is intended for the enumeration of circulating tumor cells (CTC) of epithelial origin (CD45-, EpCAM+, and cytokeratins 8, 18+, and/or 19+) in whole blood. The presence of CTC in the peripheral blood, as detected by the CellSearch® Circulating Tumor Cell Kit, is associated with decreased progression free survival and decreased overall survival in patients treated for metastatic breast cancer. This test is to be used as an aid in the monitoring of patients with metastatic breast cancer. Serial testing for CTC should be used in conjunction with other clinical methods for monitoring metastatic breast cancer. Evaluation of CTC at any time during the course of disease allows assessment of patient prognosis and is predictive of progression free survival and overall survival.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Nuclear Morphology of Breast Cells in Ductal Lavage

Benign Breast Disease

Breast nipple aspirate fluids (NAF) are useful for non-invasive monitoring of the breast. NAF has been shown to exhibit large inter-individual differences in lipid peroxidation. Unfortunately, the yield of epithelial cells in NAF is low. More recently, breast ductal lavage has been approved for clinical use. Nuclear morphologic features of breast biopsies have been shown previously to have prognostic value for breast cancer risk. In women without cancer, there may be subtle changes in the breast epithelial cells that can only be defined with computer-assisted measurements. The subjects selected for this study will be 98 women with biopsy-confirmed proliferative breast disease. These women are at slightly increased breast cancer risk, and exhibit higher mean levels of cholesterol and cholesterol oxides in NAF than women with non-proliferative histology in the breast. Levels of 8-isoprostane, cholesterol, fatty acids, fat-soluble micronutrients and 2,6-cyclolycopene-4,5-diol will be quantified in breast NAF that is obtained before breast lavage. These measures were chosen based on their potential relationship to dietary intakes and to oxidative stress, which is relevant to the application of these methods to dietary prevention studies.The investigators will characterize the morphology of breast epithelial cells from lavage using quantitative image cytometry to capture nuclear and cellular area, diameter, roundness, perimeter, and nuclear:cytoplasmic area ratio. Correlations will be evaluated between the measured morphologic features and each analyte in the NAF. The impact of various clinical, demographic and dietary factors on cellular morphology will also be explored. This study will help establish the feasibility of using these measures as endpoints in dietary intervention studies and will generate hypotheses that should be tested in larger studies. Such measures also should be applicable to molecular epidemiological investigations that seek to examine the impact of certain gene polymorphisms and environmental exposures on biomarkers of cancer risk.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Involvement of Endogenous Digitalis-like Compounds in Breast Cancer

Breast NeoplasmsFibrocystic Disease of Breast1 more

The endogenous digitalis-like compounds (DLC)are steroid hormones synthesized and released from the adrenal gland.They are integrated in the feed-back system of the Hypothalami-Pituitary-Adrenal gland axis.One of their remarkable function is to induce apoptosis in malignant cells. Recently, accumulating data point to the possibility of using synthetic DLC as new anti-cancer drugs. Less is known about the endogenous metabolism of these compounds in cancer patients. Proceeding from preliminary clinical data which demonstrated significantly reduced DLC plasma levels in breast cancer patients and from in vitro data which showed an impaired release of DLC towards stress stimuli in athymic nude mice,we put up the hypothesis that a latent adrenal insufficiency with low DLC levels facilitates the induction and progression of tumor diseases.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Prolactin Receptor and Breast Diseases

Benign Breast DiseaseBreast Cancer

Prolactin is known to play an important role in breast development and differentiation. Thus proliferative breast diseases are good models to unravel PRl / PRLR function in proliferative processes. The aim of this project is to identify and to characterize new mutants of the prolactin receptor gene within cohorts of benign or malign breast diseases with low or high occurrence frequency in human populations

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Promoting Earlier Detection of Breast Cancer in Rwanda: Scaleup in the National Health Care System...

Breast CancerBenign Breast Disease

This observational study evaluates scale-up of a breast cancer early detection program in Rwanda that was initially piloted in a single district. Specifically investigators will examine patient volume, service delivery, loss-to-follow-up rates, and cancer detection rates noted following implementation of scale-up to 3 additional districts. For scaleup, breast cancer screening with CBE was added to a cervical cancer screening initiative, in a combined Women's Cancer Early Detection Program (WCEDP).

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Genetics of Mammographic Appearances and Patterns (The GenMap Study)

Benign Breast Disease

High mammographic density (HMD) is the strongest risk factor for non-familial breast cancer apart from age and gender. Studies of sisters and twins suggest that approximately 67% of the variation in density is attributable to common genetic factors. However, to date, efforts to identify genetic determinants of HMD have achieved limited success. We and others (Boyd et al Lancet Oncol 2009) postulate that this lack of progress in identifying genetic determinants of density is related to a failure to study younger women and misclassification of density. As women age, their breast tissues undergo atrophy, which is manifested radiologically as a decrease in mammographic density, resulting in a convergence of density values and a masking of inter-person variation. This protocol is intended to demonstrate the feasibility of methods that we plan to use in a full-scale analysis of mammographic density among women under age 50 years who receive care at the University of Vermont, Fletcher Allen Health Care (FAHC) and have been followed through the Vermont Breast Cancer Surveillance System (VBCSS). The Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch (HREB) is currently conducting a cross-sectional study entitled, Breast Radiology Evaluation and Study of Tissues (BREAST) Stamp Project which aims to understand why mammographically dense tissues are related to elevated breast cancer risk. This project is being conducted within the VBCSS using breast cancer awareness Stamp Act funds. The BREAST Stamp project has focused on women between the ages of 40-65 years who were referred for radiologically-guided biopsy to evaluate an abnormality identified on a screening mammogram. The study has successfully enrolled over 400 women with collection of questionnaires, buccal and blood samples, and tissues. The study will continue recruiting through May 2010, with a targeted enrollment of 450-500 women. Through the infrastructure developed for the BREAST Stamp Project, mammographic volumetric density data, assessed using a novel method with density phantoms developed at UCSF, has been collected on approximately 25,000 screened women of all ages from February 2008-present. The current protocol describes a study in which we propose to capitalize on infrastructure that has been established through the BREAST Stamp Project. We propose to perform this study in two phases: Phase one will be a feasibility study: specifically, we propose to demonstrate that we can use a mailing to collect Oragene tube format saliva collection kits as a source of germline DNA and a short self-administered questionnaire. This collection of specimens and data will be used to inform the launch of phase two, the full-scale study to identify determinants of mammographic volumetric density among approximately 10,000 women less than 50 years of age for whom raw images and density data are already collected. During the first phase we hope to demonstrate feasibility by achieving at least 60% participation with unbiased representation of subjects with regard to demographics and volumetric density measurements. Once feasibility of this approach is established, we propose to launch the full-scale study by contacting the remaining (approximately 10,000) women with existing volumetric density data to collect questionnaires and DNA samples necessary to delineate the genetic determinants of mammographic density, as well as to investigate hypothesized risk factors for mammographic density and breast cancer risk, such as alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, and breastfeeding history.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Cystic Breast Masses by Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound (CEUS)

Breast Cancer

The overarching goal of the proposed research is to evaluate whether qualitative and quantitative parameters in real time contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) can aid in assessing suspicious indeterminate cystic appearing breast masses and ultimately determine whether or not an ultrasound guided biopsy is necessary. The underlying hypothesis is that breast masses (given BIRADS 4) that lack enhancement on CEUS will have a benign histology obtained by ultrasound guided core biopsy and/or surgery. Then, in the future, these non-enhancing cystic lesions can be followed and do not need biopsy intervention.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors for Benign Breast Disease

Benign Breast Disease

Benign diseases of the breast are common clinical conditions that affect young women. Complaints related to the breast often cause significant discomfort and mental stress. The following study will try to identify the risk factors that may be associated with symptomatic benign breast diseases. Identification of such factors may help preventing and / or treating these conditions.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

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