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Active clinical trials for "Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial"

Results 1371-1380 of 1704

Squalamine Lactate Plus Carboplatin in Treating Patients With Recurrent or Refractory Stage III...

Ovarian Cancer

RATIONALE: Squalamine lactate may stop or slow the growth of ovarian cancer by stopping blood flow to the tumor. Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Combining squalamine lactate with carboplatin may kill more tumor cells. PURPOSE: Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of combining squalamine lactate and carboplatin in treating patients who have recurrent or refractory stage III or stage IV ovarian cancer.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Quality-of-Life Study of Patients With Previously Treated Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian Cancer

RATIONALE: Quality-of-life assessment of patients undergoing cancer treatment may help determine the intermediate- and long-term effects of treatment in patients with cancer. PURPOSE: This clinical trial studies the quality of life in patients with previously treated ovarian cancer.

Terminated3 enrollment criteria

Monoclonal Antibody Therapy in Treating Patients With Ovarian Cancer or Primary Peritoneal Cancer...

Ovarian CancerPrimary Peritoneal Cavity Cancer

RATIONALE: Monoclonal antibodies can locate tumor cells and either kill them or deliver tumor-killing substances to them without harming normal cells. It is not yet known whether monoclonal antibody therapy is more effective than observation for ovarian cancer or primary peritoneal cancer that is in remission. PURPOSE: Randomized phase III trial to compare the effectiveness of monoclonal antibody therapy with that of observation in treating patients who have ovarian cancer or primary peritoneal cancer in remission following surgery and chemotherapy.

Unknown status44 enrollment criteria

Oxaliplatin and Fluorouracil in Treating Patients With Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian Cancer

RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Combining more than one drug may kill more tumor cells. PURPOSE: Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of combining oxaliplatin and fluorouracil in treating patients who have recurrent ovarian cancer.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

A Study of Apatinib Treatment in for Advanced Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian CancerChemotherapeutic Toxicity

The study is evaluated the effacy and safety of apatinib combined with chemotherapy in the advanced ovarian cancer

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Engineered Immune Effectors Against Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian Cancer

This is a single-arm, open-label, phase I/II trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of ovarian cancer specific cytotoxic lymphocytes (OC-CTLs) in women.

Unknown status34 enrollment criteria

A Study of Niraparib in Combination With Brivanib in Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian Cancer

Open-label, cohort study to determine the safety and tolerability of the combination of daily niraparib and daily brivanib for one 28-day cycle in patients with advanced ovarian cancer.

Unknown status32 enrollment criteria

Apatinib With Albumin-bound Paclitaxel in Patients With Platinum-resistant Recurrent Ovarian Cancer...

Ovarian Cancer

The study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of apatinib with albumin-bound paclitaxel in patients with platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

A Phase II Study of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Plus Durvalumab (MEDI4736) and Tremelimumab in Advanced-stage...

Ovarian Cancer Stage IIICOvarian Cancer Stage IV

The primary objective of this trial is to evaluate the synergistic effects of durvalumab and tremelimumab plus chemotherapy in advanced-stage ovarian cancer. Ovarian cancer is the deadliest gynecologic cancer. The current standard therapy is surgical cytoreduction followed by taxane-platinum combination chemotherapy. However, most patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer will experience a relapse of disease. Therefore, there is an urgent need to improve outcomes of patients with this aggressive cancer. Research hypothesis: Adding durvalumab and tremelimumab to current neoadjuvant chemotherapy (front-line therapy) in advanced-stage ovarian cancer can increase response rate and improve patient's outcome such as progression-free survival and overall survival with minimal effects on safety.

Unknown status41 enrollment criteria

Cytoreductive Surgery and HIPEC in First or Secondary Platinum-resistant Recurrent Ovarian Epithelial...

Ovarian Epithelial Cancer

With 4,600 new cases in France in 2012, ovarian cancer is the seventh most common cancer in women and the fourth cause of mortality by cancer. Despite a high response rate to initial treatment, most patients will relapse within 2 years. No standard treatment has yet been established for patients with recurrent ovarian cancer. Most patients with such recurrences are currently treated with new combinations of systemic chemotherapy. A repeated laparotomy with complete cytoreduction is also an option that several authors have used to obtain median survival rates of more than 30 months. Twenty five percent of patients experiencing relapse present with platinum-resistant recurrence, occurring less than 6 months after chemotherapy completion. Recently, Pujade et al. showed that adding bevacizumab to chemotherapy significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS) in this subgroup of patients with poor prognoses (16.6 months versus 13.3 months in women treated with chemotherapy alone). Three case control studies have compared systemic chemotherapy and CRS (Cytoreduction Surgery) alone versus CRS plus HIPEC in patients with recurrent disease. They showed significantly improved results with the addition of HIPEC. In the French registry that included 474 patients with recurrence and peritoneal carcinomatosis, the median PFS was 13.8 months for platinum-resistant patients and 13 months for platinum-sensitive patients. Our hypothesis is that surgery would reduce the tumor burden and consequently the number of platinum-resistant tumor clones and that HIPEC would control the microscopic residual disease by increasing the tumor cell cytotoxicity. We assume that adding a locoregional treatment to an "Aurelia-like" systemic treatment would improve the PFS. We aim to assess the benefit of adding surgery and HIPEC to the treatment of first or second platinum-resistant recurrence compared to chemotherapy + bevacizumab.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria
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