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Active clinical trials for "Prostatic Neoplasms"

Results 5251-5260 of 5298

Evaluation of the Practice of the TEP Choline at Patients With Prostate Cancer

Prostate Cancer

The prostate cancer is a heterogeneous disease the care of which varies according to the status: localized, locally advanced, or in recurrence after local or metastatic treatment. The precise evaluation of the degree of extension of the disease is thus essential because it is going to allow to adapt at best the therapeutic strategy. Contrary to the abdomino-pelvic scanning and to the osseous scintigraphy which(who) are a member(part) of the balance assessment of standard extension of the prostate cancer, the place of the Tomography with broadcast of Positrons to scan (TEP scan) in Choline in the management of patients affected by prostate cancer is not clearly defined in the national and European recommendations. The current marketing authorization ( AMM) is the research for bones localizations in the prostatic cancers at high risk. It indeed seems that this examination is more successful than the standard radiological examinations (bone scintigraphy and abdomino-pelvic scanning) in the detection of the bone metastatic hurts, with a sensibility of about 100 % and a precision of the order of 93 % according to certain studies. The recent data of the literature suggest a quite particular interest at the patients in situation of biochemical recurrence in terms of localization of (or) tumoral site (s). THE AMM however not specifying if this examination has to be made within the framework of the initial balance sheet of extension, at the time of the biochemical second offense or at the known metastatic stage, there is a big variability of the practices according to the centers. The current indications being very ill-assorted, he is interesting being able to estimate the heterogeneousness of the practices of way multicentre, by leading a study observationally retrospective in region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (PACA).

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Single-center Trial for the Validation of High-resolution Transrectal Ultrasound (Exact Imaging...

Prostate Cancer

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the performance of HR-TRUS in detection of prostate cancer lesions relative to whole mount section after radical prostatectomy as the reference.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Examination of Focal Therapies- MRI-Fusion, HIFU, NanoKnife and Cryotherapy

Prostate Cancer

The main objective of this study is to determine whether focal-driven therapies for diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer are preferable over current clinical methods. Different focal procedures will be examined, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-target biopsy, and focal treatment as High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU), cryoablation and Nano-Knife.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Prolaris Enhanced Risk Stratification - an ecONomic and clinicAL Evaluation

Prostate Cancer

One in 8 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime. The majority of men diagnosed with prostate cancer have early stage disease, which can be managed in a variety of ways, ranging from monitoring to international treatment. However is it not always clear which treatment option is best. All men with newly diagnosed localised prostate cancer are assigned a disease risk category (low/intermediate/high risk). This is based on clinical findings and prostate biopsy results, but these factors are limited in their ability to distinguish between aggressive and indolent prostate cancers. The current risk grouping can make it difficult to plan appropriate treatment tailored and personalised to the individual patient. There is evidence reporting overtreatment of localised prostate cancer in the UK. However, many patients with aggressive disease are wrongly assigned a low risk categorisation and are recommended surveillance when better suited to more interventional treatment. Myriad Genetics have developed a test, called Prolaris which measures how fast cells in a prostate cancer are dividing to assess its aggressiveness. The Prolaris test is performed on routine prostate biopsy tissue, so patients are not subjected to any additional invasive investigations. In this study, led by Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, the aim is find out if the Prolaris® test score helps patients with newly diagnosed prostate cancer and their clinical team make better informed treatment choices that are tailored to the individual patient. The aim to achieve a Prolaris risk score for 100 patients and determine the impact it has on treatment decision making. The research team will look at how the test fits into routine clinical practice, investigate the clinician and patient views and understanding on the test report and assess the quality of life of patients in the different risk and treatment groups.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Technetium Based Radioguided Surgery for Prostate Cancer (TRACE) Study

Prostate Cancer

PSMA-radioguided surgery

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Learning Curve of Digital Rectal Examination for Prostate Cancer Among Internship

Prostatic NeoplasmsDigital Rectal Examination1 more

The investigators conduct this prospective study to investigate the learning curve of digital rectal examination (DRE) for prostate cancer among internship. The investigators want to know how many DRE are usually needed for internship to be performed in urological practice to obtain a stable DRE accuracy.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Exploring the Mechanisms and Dynamics of Clonal Evolution Leading to Recurrence in Prostate Cancer...

Prostate Cancer Recurrent

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in males in the UK, and current estimates are that 1 in 8 will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime. Although surgery or radiotherapy with hormone therapy offers a good chance of cure in localised disease, recurrence can occur, which may cause significant distress, and may shorten the patient's life. In patients with locally advanced disease (disease that has broken through the surrounding capsule of the prostate gland), around 30-40% of patients experience a recurrence. Cancer develops as a result of normal cells acquiring genetic mutations, and localised prostate cancer at diagnosis is commonly made up of different subclones - distinct regions within the patient's cancer with different sets of genetic mutations, each of which may behave differently and be more or less sensitive to treatments. The IMRT clinical trial (CCR 1766) recruited 486 patients who received hormone therapy and radiotherapy to the prostate and lymph nodes in patients with locally advanced prostate cancer. The FORECAST study (FORecasting the Evolution of CAncer of the proState within a Trial) is undertaking genetic sequencing of several regions of these patients' prostate cancers in order to determine which subclones are present at diagnosis, and how they evolved. FORECAST also has permission to obtain and perform sequencing on primary samples from two other large trials in localized prostate cancer. This study seeks to collect blood samples from patients who have experienced a recurrence in whom the primary biopsies have been sequenced as part of FORECAST. Additionally, blood will be collected from any patient in follow up at The Royal Marsden who received radiotherapy and hormone therapy for a localised prostate cancer and has experienced a recurrence but not yet started treatment. In these patients, the FORECAST protocol will be used to undertake genetic sequencing of their original prostate cancer biopsies. Genetic mutations from the cancer can be detected in the blood in patients who relapse, so-called 'liquid biopsies'. By comparing the genetic information between the primary and relapsed cancer, we can detect which subclones present at diagnosis are ultimately responsible for the cancer relapsing, and help us to understand the evolution of prostate cancers over time. This will assist us in predicting at the point of diagnosis which patients are more likely to relapse, so that we may consider escalating primary treatments or treating patients with high-risk subclonal mutations with targeted therapies upfront. As a result, we aim to reduce the number of patients treated for localised prostate cancer experiencing a recurrence. Additionally, although liquid biopsies are well-characterized in metastatic prostate cancer, little is known about their value in patients who have a biochemical-only relapse (patients who have a rising PSA with no evidence of cancer on scans) and this will also be explored.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

The Utility of PSADv (PSA Density Velocity) While on Dutasteride for Predicting Prostate Cancer...

Prostate Cancer

This is a review of previously published data from a large prostate cancer prevention study known as REDUCE. It is the investigators intention to review whether prostate specific antigen (PSA) velocity (change over time) will predict the presence of prostate cancer and its grade and stage (severity).

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Radiotherapy Assessments During Intervention ANd Treatment (RADIANT)

Radiation TherapyCancer17 more

Collect blood samples and associated clinical data prior to, during, and post radiation treatment.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Designing a Digital Tool to Support Healthy Lifestyle in Men With Prostate Cancer

Health LiteracyComputer Literacy1 more

The emil project aims to design, develop, implement and evaluate a digital service to support a healthy lifestyle among men with prostate cancer. In this second study, men with a history of prostate cancer are invited to participate in the scoping and design of a digital platform, through three iterations of workshops and individual interviews, which includes prototyping and other ideation processes. Finally, the men with a history of prostate cancer will be involved in the usability testing of the design, to ensure a platform fit for use by the intended users.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria
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