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Active clinical trials for "Leiomyoma"

Results 41-50 of 415

The Impact of Myomectomy on IVF Outcomes

Myoma;UterusIVF1 more

In 2% to 3% infertility women, myoma is the only factor relevant to their infertility. However, the effects of intramural myoma on fertility are controversial. For infertile women with intramural myoma (types IV, V, VI of FIGO system) of 4 to 6 cm diameter, it is not clear whether myomectomy could improve pregnancy outcomes, especially in women undergoing ART. Besides, rigorous clinical research is needed to explore the changes and relevant biomarkers of endometrial receptivity through multi-omics study in patients undergoing myomectomy and ART treatment. Method Intervention and follow-up: (1) For the control group, evaluation protocols such as salpingography and/or laparoscopic tubal fluxation should be implemented to identify disorders such as hydrosalpinx. (2) Imaging evaluation: all pelvic MRI were performed. Other options such as transvaginal ultrasound are not excluded, but won't replace MRI. Enhanced MRI or DWI may be considered, but are not always required. (3) Surgical intervention: laparoscopic myomectomy is preferred, and abdominal myomectomy is also acceptable. (4) IVF treatment: the IVF regimen should include detailed records of the downregulation plan, number of cycles, frozen or fresh blastocysts. Study endpoints (1) Primary study endpoint: Live birth rate after IVF. (2) Secondary study endpoints: Clinical pregnancy rate after IVF; Cumulative pregnancy rate after IVF; Biochemical pregnancy rate after IVF; Sustained pregnancy rate after IVF (≥20 weeks); Miscarriage rate after IVF; Cycles of IVF; Pregnancy-related complications; Perinatal maternal and neonatal complications. (3) Exploratory endpoints: The correlation between imaging index and assisted reproductive outcomes, including endometrial thickness, uterine volume, type of endometrial echo, uterine contraction; endometrial vascular index (VI), flow index (FI), tubular flow index (VFI); uterine artery pulsation index (PI), uterine artery resistance index (RI), systolic/diastolic blood pressure of uterine artery (S/D). The correlation between endometrial receptivity and assisted reproductive outcomes is analyzed based on transcriptomics, metabolomics, methylation and proteomics in samples from peripheral blood, endometrial biopsy, endometrial exfoliated cells, cervical exfoliated cells and myoma.

Not yet recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Sonographic Features of Fibroids Before and During Non-surgical Therapy and/or Expectant Management...

Fibroid Uterus

Rationale: 20-30% of women of reproductive age have leiomyomas, causing symptoms like dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain which both effect quality of life.[1-4] The natural behaviour of uterine fibroids is to grow between 7 to 84% in 3 to 12 months.[5-7] Non-surgical options to treat uterine fibroids are non-hormonal or hormonal medical therapies and minimally invasive interventional radiologic techniques. Exogenous hormone exposure including COC, POP or Mirena give in conflicting literature minimal growth to 60% volume shrinkage. [8, 9]] Selective progesterone receptor modulators (SPRM) eg. Esmya and GnRH-analogues intent to reduce fibroids volume after several months; GnRH-agonists provide a 31-63% shrinkage and less frequently applied GnRH-antagonists 14.3 - 42.7%.[10-16] Esmya gives a volume reduction varying between 10 to 48%.[17] Radiological technique like embolization decreases dominant fibroid volume with 40-70%.[1, 18-22] UAE fails in case of devascularized or minimal vascularized fibroids.[23] Ablation techniques show shrinkage up to a maximum of 90% depending e.g. which treatment.[24-41] Clear prognostic models to predict the effect on fibroid related symptoms and volume reduction are lacking. We postulate higher vascularity to be related to 1) larger fibroid growth during the natural course or during exogenous hormonal exposure; 2) more effective shrinkage during progestogens, GnRH-analogues, SPRM and UAE; but 3) less effective after ablation therapy. Objectives: To study the value of sonographic features including vascularity in the prediction of fibroids' volume change at follow-up during their (1) natural course or (2) long-term use of exogenous hormone exposure; after initiation of (3) SPRM or GnRH-analogues treatment or (4) exogenous hormonal exposure; or after (5) embolization or (6) ablation therapy. Study design: Observational cohort study during 5 years in the outpatient clinic. Patientselection: Women ≥18 years with 1 to 3 fibroids with a maximal diameter ≥ 3cm and ≤ 10cm diagnosed on ultrasound examination, planned for expectant or non-surgical management. Study objectives: The primary outcome is volume reduction after 3 to 12 month depending on the study group. The secondary outcome include UFS-QOL, EQ-5D score, PBAC, hemoglobin level, treatment failure rate and (re)intervention rate. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: No risks are associated with the participation of this observational study since the outcome measures include vaginal ultrasound, questionaires and a hemoglobin test. These measurements are also applied in daily practice, the burden for the patient is time. Extra in the context of the study are questionnaires which last a maximum of 5-15 minutes. The treatment considering the fibroid(s) is independent of this research.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Uterine Fibroids on Pregnancy in Women

Female InfertilityUterine Fibroid

Female fertility may be affected by uterine fibroids, although this association has not been elucidated. This retrospective cohort study aims to evaluate the impact of fibroids on women fertility.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Management of Uterine Leiomyomata and Adenomyosis

Abnormal Uterine Bleeding

to determine the role of hysteroscopy and guided biopsy to differentiate between submucosal fibroids and adenomyosis confirmed by histopathological examination to evaluate the efficacy of norethisterone in the treatment of symptomatic adenomyosis and leiomyoma

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Uterine Filling Pressure in Hysteroscopy

Fibroids

The aim of the study is to compare the outcomes of patients undergoing hysteroscopy with a Myosure device with a pressure of 60 mmHg to those using the standard of 80 mmHg.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Hereditary Leiomyomatosis Renal Cell Cancer - Study of the Genetic Cause and the Predisposition...

Renal Tumor HistologyCutaneous Leiomyoma1 more

This study will investigate what causes hereditary leiomyomatosis renal (kidney) cell cancer, or HLRCC, and how the disease is related to the development of kidney tumors. Leiomyomas are benign (non-cancerous) tumors arising from smooth muscle. HLRCC can cause various health problems. Some people develop red bumps on their skin that can be painful at times. Some women with HLRCC can develop leiomyomas of the uterus. In some families, people with HLRCC develop kidney tumors. This study will try to determine: What gene changes (mutations) cause HLRCC What kind of kidney tumors develop in HLRCC and how they grow What the chance is that a person with HLRCC will develop a kidney tumor People with known or suspected HLRCC (and their family members of any age) may be eligible for this study. This includes people in families in which one or more members has skin leiomyoma and kidney cancer; skin leiomyoma and uterine leiomyoma; multiple skin leiomyomas; kidney cancer and uterine leiomyomas, or kidney cancer consistent with HLRCC, including, but not limited to, collecting duct or papillary, type II. Candidates will be screened with a physical examination, family history, and, for affected family members, a review of medical records, including pathology slides and computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. Participants will undergo tests and procedures that may include the following: Review of medical records, x-rays, and tissue slides Physical examination and family history Skin examination Gynecological examination for women Interviews with a cancer doctor, cancer nurses, kidney surgeon, and genetic counselor Blood tests for: Genetic research to identify the gene responsible for HLRCC Evaluation of liver, kidney, heart, pancreas, and thyroid function Complete blood count and clotting profile Pregnancy test for pre-menopausal women PSA test for prostate cancer in men over age 40 CT or MRI scans (for participants 15 years of age and older only) Skin biopsy (surgical removal of a small sample of skin tissue) Cheek swab or mouth rinse to collect cells for genetic analysis Medical photographs of lesions Questionnaire When the tests are completed, participants will discuss the results with a doctor and possibly a genetic nurse or genetic counselor. The genetic findings will not be revealed to participants because their meaning and implications may not yet be understood. Participants may be asked to return to NIH from every 3 months to every 3 years, depending on their condition, for follow-up examinations and tests.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Feasibility of Using Augmented Reality in Laparoscopic Surgery, by a Clinical...

Myoma;UterusAdenomyoma of Uterus

Augmented Reality is a technology that allows surgeons to superimpose virtual images from preoperative imaging onto the endoscopic vision system intraoperatively. The goal of this clinical trial is to demonstrate that the use of augmented reality during laparoscopic gynecological surgery with a dedicated device could provide assistance to the surgeon, in terms of technical comfort and better visualization of the benign tumor to be resected on a mobile organ.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Comparison Between Robotic (RM) and Laparoscopic Myomectomy (LM)

Uterine LeiomyomaSurgical Procedure1 more

This is a single-blinded RCT evaluating the effect of robotic-assisted (RM) or conventional laparoscopic surgery (LM) in the management of uterine leiomyomas.

Not yet recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Establishment of a Decision Aid Tool for Asymptomatic Small Leiomyoma and Analysis of Influencing...

LeiomyomaUterine2 more

With the younger patients diagnosed with asymptomatic leiomyoma, delay in the reproductive age of women, the advancement of medical technology, and the rapid development of treatment methods, there are many choices between gynecologists, gynecologists and patients because of experience and knowledge. It is not easy to make the most favorable choice for patients. This study is mainly led by a committee composed of designers, doctors, nurses and patients, and based on clinical guidelines and evidence-based medicine. Co-operating with patients with asymptomatic small leiomyoma, we want to find the influencing factors of clinical decision-making, and to establish a patient decision aid tool. We use prospective trial to verify that the use of this tool can improve patients' decision-making efficacy and further improve patient-reported outcomes.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Point of Care 3D Ultrasound for Various Applications: A Pilot Study

AppendicitisEvidence of Cholecystectomy22 more

Summary Purpose and Objective: The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility of rapid acquisition of point of care 3D ultrasound in obtaining abdominal and/or pelvic images. The study will use a newly developed acquisition method and post-processing technique to create three dimensional image models of the abdomen and/or pelvis. Study activities and population group. The study population will be a convenience sample of patients of any age presenting to the Emergency Department with complaints necessitating a clinical abdominal and/or pelvic imaging. The study intervention includes acquisition of research ultrasound images, which will not be used for clinical care, and comparison of these images with clinically obtained images. Other clinical data such as surgical and pathology reports will also be reviewed. 3.Data analysis and risk/safety issues. This is a pilot study intended to determine feasibility and to refine image reconstruction algorithms. Research images will be compared to clinical images. Comparison of research images with final diagnosis will also occur. The research intervention, an ultrasound exam, has no known safety risks. The only risk to subjects is loss of confidentiality. This study is observational, not interventional, because the experimental ultrasound will be performed in all subjects and will not be used in the clinical care of patients (consequently, will not have the opportunity to affect clinical outcomes). Experimental images will be reviewed after completion of clinical care and will not be provided to the clinicians caring for the subjects. The investigators are not measuring the effect of the ultrasound examination on the subjects' outcomes.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria
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