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Active clinical trials for "Leiomyoma"

Results 121-130 of 415

Comparison Study in the Treatment of Uterine Fibroids Uterine Fibroid Embolization Using BeadBlock™...

LeiomyomaLeiomyomatosis1 more

A double arm (non-inferiority) 44 patient study to assess the performance of BeadBlock™ in the treatment of uterine fibroids by embolization with respect to clinical & imaging outcome with comparison of primary safety endpoints to Embosphere.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Mifepristone 10 or 5 mg for 6 Months to Treat Uterine Fibroids

Uterine Fibroids

The objectives of this study are to estimate the efficacy and safety of the daily administration for 6 months of 5 mg versus 10 mg. A 6 month follow-up of subjects is carried out to estimate how the effects of mifepristone are kept in time. The hypothesis of this study is that both mifepristone doses reduce the volume of the myoma up to 50% in six months treatment.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Randomized Pilot Study for the Treatment of Cutaneous Leiomyomas With Botulinum Toxin

Cutaneous LeiomyomasHereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer

Cutaneous leiomyomas are benign tumors of smooth muscle origin. They can be very painful, and current treatments for the tumors and for the associated pain do not produce satisfactory results. One potential treatment for localized severe muscle pain involves injections with botulinum toxin A. This study will investigate the effectiveness, side effects, and dosage of botulinum toxin A (BOTOX) as a treatment for patients with pain associated with cutaneous leiomyomas. This study will include 18 subjects, all of whom will be 18 years of age and older, who have pain associated with cutaneous leiomyomas. For the 24-week study, patients will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups. Neither the study team nor the patient will know to which group patients have been assigned. Before the study begins, all participants must provide a full medical history for research and evaluation purposes, fill out pain and quality-of-life questionnaires, and undergo an ice test in which researchers will apply ice to the site of the cutaneous leiomyomas and ask participants to evaluate the level of pain before and after ice application. Both groups will be required to keep a pain diary throughout the study to record their level of pain on a daily basis, and will be asked to avoid or restrict the use of specific medications or other remedies to treat the pain. At the first visit (Week 0), one group will receive a prescribed dose of botulinum toxin A, which will be administered as an injection into the leiomyoma, and the other (control) group will receive a placebo injection of a saline solution. Patients will return 4 weeks later, at which time they will undergo a medical examination, and the ice test, and complete questionnaires to assess responses and level of pain. Patients will return in Week 12, at which time the group assignment will be revealed (un-blinded) to investigators and patients. Patients who received placebo injections will be offered the opportunity to receive injection of botulinum toxin A into their leiomyomas. All patients will undergo a medical examination, the ice test, complete questionnaires, and continue completing their daily pain diaries at home. The final visit, in Week 24, will follow the same procedure as the Week 4 visit. At the end of the study, patients may be eligible to have one or more of the painful cutaneous leiomyomas surgically removed if the researchers believe that the skin lesions can be removed with a reasonable cosmetic result.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

A Study to Evaluate of the Safety and Effectiveness of Asoprisnil in Treating Women With Uterine...

Fibroid UterusLeiomyoma3 more

The objective of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy effects of two doses of asoprisnil (10 mg and 25 mg) compared with placebo when administered daily for 6 months to premenopausal subjects with symptomatic uterine leiomyomata.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

A Study to Evaluate the Effects of Asoprisnil(J867) in Women With Uterine Fibroids Who Are Scheduled...

Uterine FibroidsLeiomyoma

The objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of 10 mg and 25 mg doses of asoprisnil, compared to placebo, taken daily for 12 weeks, on uterine blood flow and the morphology of the endometrium and uterine fibroids.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

Treatment of Heavy Menstrual Bleeding in Women With Uterine Fibroids

Heavy Menstrual BleedingMenorrhagia1 more

This is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to assess the comparative effectiveness of Levonorgestrel Intrauterine System (LNG-IUS) to Tranexamic Acid (TA) for the treatment of heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) in women with clinically-significant fibroids.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

Laparoscopic Myomectomy With Morcellation or Transvaginal Extraction of Surgical Specimens.

Myoma;Uterus

Laparoscopic myomectomy represents the fertility-sparing gold standard approach for the management of subserosal and intramural uterine myomas: this technique allows faster recovery, less complications and improved surgical outcomes than laparotomy. Despite these validated cornerstones of minimally invasive gynecology, the best approach for specimen retrieval is still debated. Among these approaches, surgical specimen retrieval after laparoscopic myomectomy could be performed by mini-laparotomy, by power morcellation using morcellator inserted through one of the ancillary trocars, or by transvaginal extraction through an endobag inserted at level of the posterior vaginal fornix (between the utero-sacral ligaments). Unfortunately, mini-laparotomy has poor esthetic outcome and does not conform the current standards of minimally invasive surgery. In addition, on 24 November 24 2014 the Food and Drug Administration updated a Safety Communication about Power Morcellation, warning against the use of laparoscopic power morcellators in the majority of women undergoing myomectomy or hysterectomy for treatment of fibroids, due to the risk of spreading an unsuspected uterine sarcoma within the abdomen and pelvis. Considering this scenario, transvaginal extraction may represents a feasible approach for specimen retrieval. In this view, the current study aims to retrospectively compare surgical outcomes in women that underwent laparoscopic myomectomy with subsequent power morcellation (before the issuing of the abovementioned Safety Communication by the Food and Drug Administration) or transvaginal extraction (after the issuing of the abovementioned Safety Communication by the Food and Drug Administration) of the surgical specimens.

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

High-intensity Focused Ultrasound in Treatment of Uterine Fibroid

Fibroids

Uterine fibroids are common uterine benign neoplasm. They can cause abnormal menstrual bleeding, pelvic discomfort and urinary frequency. Although surgical intervention is the definitive treatment, some women prefer to have their uterus preserved. High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy is receiving increasing interest in the management of uterine fibroids by inducing focal thermocoagulation of the fibroids. Results obtained by various research groups have shown that HIFU treatment is safe, effective and is highly acceptable to patients. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of HIFU in the treatment of uterine fibroids. In this proposed study, 20 patients who have symptomatic uterine fibroids who meet the study inclusion criteria will be invited to participate in the study which involves the use of HIFU in the management of the fibroid. Background information of the patients such as age, body mass index, hormonal (pre- or postmenopausal) status and the presence of chronic medical disease will be collected. Subjects will also be asked to complete an eight-item section of a Uterine Fibroid Symptom and Quality Of Life Questionnaire (UFS-QOL) which evaluate the effect of the fibroid on the quality of life of women.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Safety and Tolerability of Collagenase Clostridium Histolyticum (EN3835) to Treat Uterine Leiomyoma...

FibroidsUterine1 more

This pilot study evaluates the safety and tolerability of a single injection of collagenase enzyme directly into a uterine fibroid in subjects already selected for hysterectomy or myomectomy. Fibroids contain excessive amounts of collagen and it is possible that digestion of collagen may be beneficial in reducing pain and bleeding associated with fibroids. Three subjects will be injected with saline only to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the injection method. Additional subjects will then be injected with increasing doses of study drug.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Prevalence of Intrauterine Adhesions After Abdominal Myomectomy

Myoma;Uterus

Uterine fibroids are the most common benign tumors of the genital organs of women of childbearing age. Literature data show that more than 75% of women have fibroids.Symptomatic fibroids account for approximately over 200,000 hysterectomies and 50,000 myomectomies annually in the United States. Fibroids have a major impact on fertility, with significant adverse effect on implantation rate and spontaneous abortion rates when compared with infertile women without fibroids. The definitive treatment for uterine fibroids in a fertile patient is surgical excision. Although usually effective, myomectomy is not a risk-free operation, since the surgical procedure can cause mechanical infertility and can be associated with infection, injury to adjacent tissues, hemorrhage and need to convert to hysterectomy. A not often mentioned consequence of myomectomy is post-operative intrauterine adhesion formation. It has been reported that 50% of women undergoing open myomectomy are found to have intrauterine adhesions diagnosed by hysteroscopy performed 3 months after surgery. Such a high prevalence of intrauterine adhesions after open myomectomy is unexpected, however only few studies have addressed this topic. It is accepted that injury to the endometrium is generally considered to be the primary causative factor for the development of intrauterine adhesions. The reason for such a high incidence of intrauterine adhesions after open myomectomy is unclear. It is speculated that infection or in adverted closure of the uterine cavity may play a role in intrauterine adhesion formation. The relationship between the number of fibroids removed and the risk of adhesions suggests a traumatic etiology. In the preservation of the uterus for the purpose of fertility, it is essential to also understand the impact of myomectomy on the endometrium. Currently no guideline recommends in office hysteroscopy as follow-up after myomectomy. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the frequency of uterine adhesions following myomectomy and the impact of number, size and location of the fibroids as well as intraoperative breach of the endometrial cavity at the time of the myomectomy.

Not yet recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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