177Lu-PP-F11N in Combination With Sacubitril for Receptor Targeted Therapy and Imaging of Metastatic...
Thyroid CancerMedullaryThe purpose of this study is to determine the use of 177Lu-PP-F11N for imaging and therapy of patients with advanced medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). 177Lu-PP-F11N is a gastrin analogon, binding to cholecystokinin-2 receptors. This receptors show an overexpression on more than 90 % of medullary thyroid carcinomas.
Metformin Hydrochloride in Mitigating Side Effects of Radioactive Iodine Treatment in Patients With...
ThyroidThis pilot clinical trial studies how will metformin hydrochloride works in mitigating the side effects of radioactive iodine treatment in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer. Metformin hydrochloride may reduce the metabolic activity of cancer cell and of surrounding supportive tissues.
Effect of Perioperative Intravenous Lidocaine Infusion and Magnesium Infusion on the Functional...
Thyroid CancerStudies have attempted to control pain and increase patients' recovery satisfaction following many kinds of operations by using as small an opioid analgesic dose as possible and adding a nonopioid analgesic to reduce the side effects of narcotic analgesics. Among nonopioid analgesics, lidocaine and magnesium are drawing attention, having been shown to be helpful in controlling postoperative pain by lowering pain hypersensitivity to surgical stimuli. Lidocaine acts as an antagonist of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. An intraoperative intravenous injection of lidocaine has been reported to improve postoperative pain control by reducing postoperative pain and opioid consumption. Another report showed that an intraoperative intravenous injection of lidocaine improved the quality of postoperative functional recovery after general anesthesia in a laparoscopic cholecystectomy patient. In addition, a review article on the effect of intraoperative intravenous injection of magnesium found it to be an effective analgesic that may be added to conventional opioid-based therapy because it generally reduces opioid consumption, decreases pain assessment for 24 hours after surgery, and lacks severe side effects in relation to magnesium administration. However, there has been insufficient research comparing the intraoperative intravenous injection of lidocaine or magnesium in terms of which is more helpful for general functional recovery and decreased postoperative pain. Recently, the scope of research on anesthesia has come to embrace postanesthetic recovery; to help patients return to daily life, the research trend is now shifting from the improvement or resolution of a specific symptom to the measurement of general recovery. Postoperative recovery is a complicated process related to such catamnestic factors as physiological end-points, the incidence of adverse events, and changes in psychological status. A widely used method to measure postoperative recovery is the Quality of Recovery 40 (QoR-40) survey. The QoR-40 includes a total of 40 questions that may be divided into five sub-categories: emotional state, physical comfort, psychological support, physical independence, and pain. The respondent answers each question on a 5-point scale, with one being worst and five being best. The QoR-40 takes 6.3 minutes on average to complete and is known to have good test-retest reliability, internal consistency, and split-half reliability. With respect to anesthetic recovery, the QoR-40 has been used in various studies to investigate how the surgery type, anesthesia method, administration of an additional drug, and gender affect anesthesia and surgery. The validity of the QoR-40 for research purposes has already been established. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the intraoperative intravenous injection of lidocaine and the intravenous injection of magnesium to compare these drugs' helpfulness in the functional recovery of thyroidectomy patients after general anesthesia.
Study Of AG-013736 In Patients With 131I-Refractory Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid NeoplasmsThe primary purpose is to determine how effective AG-013736 is in shrinking thyroid cancer that is resistant to radioactive iodine
Dose-dependent Effect of Fentanyl on Cough Attenuation During Emergence From General Anaesthesia...
Thyroid NeoplasmFentanyl is expected to suppress tracheal tube-induced cough during emergence from general anaesthesia through binding to its receptors in the brainstem. However, it has not been proven if fentanyl has a complication-free, dose-dependent effect on cough suppression during emergence from sevoflurane anaesthesia. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the relationship between fentanyl doses and cough suppression during emergence from sevoflurane anaesthesia.
Anlotinib Neoadjuvant Treatment in Locally Advanced Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid CancerTo determine the efficacy and safety of Anlotinib in patients of locally advanced thyroid cancer in the neoadjuvant setting.
Safety and Efficacy Study of Ultrasonic Coagulation Device and Bipolar Energy Sealing System
Thyroid CancerThe aim of the study is to evaluate differences between use of Ultrasonic Coagulation Device (New Harmonic ACE™, Ethicon endo-surgery) and Bipolar Energy Sealing System (LigaSure Precise™, Covidien) in surgery for thyroid cancer. Abbreviations: Ultrasonic Coagulation Device (UC), Bipolar Energy Sealing System (BES), Recurrence-free survival (RFS), Overall survival (OS)
Study of Everolimus and Sorafenib in Patients With Advanced Thyroid Cancer Who Progressed on Sorafenib...
Differentiated Thyroid CancerThe goal of this study is to determine the effect of combining everolimus and sorafenib in patients with metastatic differentiated thyroid cancer who progressed on sorafenib alone.
Medico-Economic Comparison of Four Strategies of Radioiodine Ablation in Thyroid Carcinoma Patients...
Thyroid CancerIn France, 3,700 new cases of thyroid cancer are diagnosed each year. Differentiated thyroid carcinoma represents more than 90% of all thyroid cancers; and has a 10-year survival of 90-95% of patients. This favorable prognosis is the result of an effective primary therapy, which consists of a total thyroidectomy that is followed by radio-iodine ablation with 3,7GBq (100mCi) in case of significant risk of persistent disease. Few centers investigated the possibility to administer lower doses of 131I (1GBq, 30 mCi), in order to limit the potential long-term adverse complications for patients and to respond to radioprotection rules for family members and medical staff. Radio-iodine ablation requires TSH stimulation, which was historically achieved by thyroid hormone withdrawal for 3 to 5 weeks. During this period, patients suffered from symptoms of hypothyroidism. The recombinant human TSH (rhTSH, Thyrogen®, Genzyme Therapeutics, Cambridge, USA) was approved in Europe in 2005 as an alternative stimulation procedure to withdrawal during ablation. It allows patients to remain euthyroid on thyroid hormone therapy (that needs not to be withdrawn). However, this a costly drug (800 € per patient), whose economic efficiency needs to be checked.
Trail Evaluating Apatinib With IMRT for Inoperable or Iodine Refractory Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid CancerTo determine the efficacy and safety of intensity modulated radiation therapy combined with apatinib for inoperable or iodine refractory thyroid cancer.