search

Active clinical trials for "Head and Neck Neoplasms"

Results 1781-1790 of 1835

Is Screening for Esophageal Pathology in Asymptomatic Patients Post-Treatment for Head and Neck...

Esophageal Cancer

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of esophageal pathology in asymptomatic patients with a history of head and neck cancer.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Validity and Reliability of Outcome Measures in Patients With Cancer of the Head and Neck

Head and Neck Cancer

The purpose of this study is to establish the Six-Minute Walk Test, 10-Meter Walk Test, 30 Second Chair Stand, Linear Analog Scale of Function, and the Modifed Brief Fatigue Inventory as reliable and valid outcome measurements for patients with head and neck cancer.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Incidence and Risk Factors of Refeeding Syndrome

Cancer of the Head and Neck

The main objective of this observational survey was to determine the incidence rate of refeeding phenomena (RFF) (defined as any decline in p-phosphate) and RFS (defined as any decline in p-phosphate with additional development of any of the following clinical symptoms: oedema, confusion, dyspnoea, hypotension, arrhythmia, seizures) among recently admitted or referred HNC patients to the Department of Otorhinolaryngology for surgery. The second objective was to determine if informations at admittance could identify HNC patients at high risk of developing RFF and RFS.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Tumor Hypoxia of Head-and-neck Cancer Underwent Radiation Therapy Measured With F-18-FMISO

Head and Neck Neoplasms

The purpose of this study is to describe the regional and global tumor hypoxia in head-and-neck cancer during percutaneous radiation therapy

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Tumor Metabolism of Head and Neck Cancer in Patients Who Underwent Radiation Therapy Measured With...

Head and Neck Cancer

The purpose of the study is to describe the regional and global FDG-kinetics in head and neck cancer during percutaneous radiation therapy.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Predictors of Normal Tissue Response From the Microenvironment in Radiotherapy for Prostate and...

Prostate CancerHead and Neck Cancer

The main idea behind MICRO-LEARNER is to provide new insights about the response of healthy tissues to radiation by using information from the micro-environment obtained by biological measurements and imaging. This new knowledge will be included in current available predictive models of radio-induced toxicity, thus allowing to add unique biological characteristics of patients to dosimetry and treatment/clinical related variables. MICRO-LEARNER focuses on prostate cancer (PCa) and head-and-neck cancer (HNCa). For both cancers, radiotherapy is effectively used as curative treatment, in single modality or within a multidisciplinary approach including surgery (PCa) and/or chemotherapy (HNCa). Prediction and reduction of radio-induced side effects are becoming a priority: for PCa, high survival rates should be accompanied by a very low rate of moderate/severe toxicities; for HNCa, there is the need to tailor radiation dose according to disease recurrence risk profile. The shared aim of both cancers is to balance the improvement in outcome with a well-tolerated toxicity profile. Recent research indicates that the intestinal/salivary bacteria are strongly suspected of being very important in mediating the response to inflammation and lesions. Although their balance deeply changes during radiotherapy, studies done so far in the field of the microbiota-host relationship in radiotherapy have not addressed their role in insurgence of radiation toxicity. In this study, the investigators will assess how microbial populations evolve and how this influences the host and radiation induced toxicity in a significant number of patients. Moreover, the individual response at the tissue microstructure level, through analysis of images with advanced bioengineering techniques, will be determined. Results from this research, besides suggesting new ways to predict patients at risk of relevant side-effects, may also suggest possible treatments to change the baseline microbiota of patients at high risk or to modify it during therapy, in order to mitigate toxicity. Understanding the microbiota-radiotherapy interaction may thus lead to novel, effective and inexpensive ways of assessing and managing complications of cancer treatment.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Modulation of Anti-tumor T Cell Responses in Cancer Patients Treated by Concomitant Radiochemotherapy...

Lung CancerHead and Neck Cancer

The aim of this study is to evaluate modulation of anti-tumor T cell responses in cancer patients treated by concomitant radiochemotherapy (i-RTCT)

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Effect of Radiation Therapy Among Head and Neck Cancer Patients on the Inner Ear Function

Head and Neck Cancer Patients Treated With Radiotherapy

Aims: 1. To evaluate the effects of radiation therapy on the inner ear, among patients treated with radiation therapy for head and neck cancers using a wide battery of tests (Audiometry and tympanometry, vHIT, VEMP, ENG) ; 2. To correlate the mean total radiation dose to the cochlea with the effects on audiological and vestibular function

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

External Control, Observational, Retrospective Study Comparing Pralsetinib to Best Available Therapy...

RET-fusion Non Small Cell Lung CancerLung Neoplasm19 more

This is an external control, observational, retrospective study designed to compare clinical outcomes for pralsetinib compared with best available therapy for patients with RET-fusion positive advanced NSCLC.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

A Prospective Longitudinal Cohort Study Looking at the Difference in Carotid Intima-medial Thickness...

Head and Neck Tumours

Some patients with head and neck cancer or benign tumours of the head and neck receive radiotherapy to their neck as part of their treatment. The large arteries in the neck, the carotid arteries, are often included in the area being treated with radiotherapy. There is some evidence to show that radiotherapy to these blood vessels can result in thickening and furring of the artery walls some years after treatment. This thickening may then result in stiffening and narrowing of the artery. Current research is now aimed towards detecting radiotherapy-related changes to the carotid arteries at an earlier stage and towards using new radiotherapy techniques to avoid treating these blood vessels if possible. The question of whether or not the use of preventive medicines like aspirin and cholesterol-lowering tablets helps to reverse this process is currently unanswered. The aim of this study is to compare the thickness (intima-medial thickness) of the carotid artery wall over time (a period of 5 years) following radiotherapy to the thickness in carotid arteries that have not received radiotherapy. There are many other causes for thickening of arteries (such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels and diabetes) and these may affect the ability to measure the effect of radiotherapy change to the artery wall. In order to address this, it is ideal to look at this process in patients who are having only one side of the neck treated and use the other side as a comparison. The study will also be investigating for earlier signs of radiotherapy-related changes, such as stiffening of the artery wall, inflammation in the artery wall (a very early sign of radiotherapy-related change) and some markers in the blood that may indicate that this process is taking place. The null hypotheses of this study are: In irradiated carotid arteries, mean intimal-medial thickness at one year following radiotherapy will be the same as in unirradiated arteries. The incidence of carotid artery stenosis will be the same in irradiated and unirradiated carotid arteries Arterial wall strain at one year following radiotherapy will be the same in irradiated and unirradiated carotid arteries. Microbubble ultrasound will not be able to detect Inflammation in the carotid arteries during radiotherapy as an early marker of atherosclerosis; microbubble ultrasound will not demonstrate at what dose of radiotherapy inflammation begins. Serum biomarker levels will not increase over time from baseline after radiotherapy and won't correlate to IMT and arterial strain.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria
1...178179180...184

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs