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Active clinical trials for "Thyroid Neoplasms"

Results 601-610 of 654

Scientific Protocol for the Study of Thyroid Cancer and Other Thyroid Disease in Ukraine Following...

Thyroid CancerNon-Cancer Thyroid Disease1 more

The nuclear power plant accident at Chornobyl released large quantities of Iodine-131 and other radioisotopes of iodine in the atmosphere, contaminating thousands of square kilometers and exposing millions of people. For this study, a well-defined subset of Ukrainian children aged 0-18 years or in utero at the time of the accident are being identified and examined by well-trained specialists for thyroid disease every two years for at least three cycles. The study is a collaborative effort of research in Ukraine and the United States. The cohort will include approximately 13,000 persons who were children in 1986, all or most of whom have had their thyroids measured for radioactivity during the weeks immediately following the accident (or whose mothers had measurements taken while the child was in utero). Under a rigid research protocol these subjects will receive diagnostic thyroid examinations, including palpation, ultrasound scanning, thyroid hormone and other laboratory tests, and, if indicated, fine-needle aspiration biopsy. Interview information regarding residential, health, diet and lifestyle history will also be collected. All subjects will be followed for thyroid cancer morbidity and mortality. Thyroid cancers will be confirmed by expert pathology examination of tissue. In addition to the analysis of thyroid radiation measurements made in May-June, 1986, efforts will be made to reconstruct each person's exposure and to estimate the radiation dose to the thyroid. This will involve the reconstruction of deposition patterns and environmental pathways of the radioiodines, and of the location, dietary characteristics, and lifestyle of each person throughout the exposure period. The aim of the study is to carry out valid and credible assessments of the early and late morphologic and functional changes in the thyroid glands of persons exposed to radiation from radioactive materials released as a consequence of the Chornobyl nuclear power plant accident. The emphasis is on dose- and time-specific changes. In the course of the study other possible risk factors will be examined including dietary iodine intake during and after 1986, and the ingestion of potassium iodide for thyroid protection shortly after the accident.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Clinicopathological Importance of Colorectal Medullary Carcinoma: Retrospective Cohort Study

Colorectal Medullary Carcinoma

Medullary carcinoma (MC) is a rare tumor with solid growth pattern without glandular differentiation and constitute less than 1% of colorectal cancer. Lymph node positivity and distant organ metastasis were reported to be lower than other poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas. Therefore, the diagnosis of MC is pathologically important in terms of follow-up and treatment. MC is commonly localized in the right colon, has a large tumor size, and is mostly diagnosed in the T4 stage. As MC most likely have defects in DNA MMR, the correct pathological diagnosis is important for the postoperative treatment and the prognosis of the patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Thyroid Cancer in United Arab Emirates

ThyroidCancer

The main objective of the study is to assess the trend of clinicopathological features and treatment modalities in patients with thyroid cancer in the largest oncology center in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Cholesterol Metabolites Analysis in Human Thyroid and Iodine Resistance

Thyroid Cancer

The study team previously shown that a cholesterol metabolite, dendrogenin A (DDA) differentiates anaplastic thyroid cancer cell lines and that its mRNA expression is diminished in human radioiodine refractory thyroid cancer samples. The team aim to quantify via mass spectrometry and immunohistochemistry DDA and other cholesterol metabolites in thyroid cancer versus healthy thyroid tissue human samples.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Near-infrared Fluorescence With Indocyanine Green for Identification of Sentinels and Parathyroids...

Thyroid CancerThyroid Carcinoma5 more

Indocyanine green (ICG) is a water-soluble organic dye that is cleared totally through the hepatobiliary system. It has a half-life of 3-4 mins, which allows repeated applications. Near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence imaging with indocyanine green (ICG) imaging has been recently introduced, and has been suggested as a useful tool for the identification and preservation of the parathyroid glands (PGs) during total thyroidectomy (TT). ICG can also be used for sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy to predict the micrometastases in central lymph nodes (CLN) in thyroid carcinoma, and central lymph node dissection can reduce local recurrence.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Papillary Thyroid Cancer and Central Lymp Node Dissection

Papillary Thyroid Cancer

Papillary cancer is a disease that spreads through lymphatic ways and its treatment is surgery. We performed prophylactic central dissection in addition to bilateral total thyroidectomy in patients with bethesda 5 and bethesda 6 biopsy results. We evaluated the pathology results retrospectively.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Prognostic Value of Tumor Deposits for Patients With Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma

Exploring the Prognostic Value of Tumor Deposits PTC Patients

Tumor deposits (TD), nodules in the peritumoral adipose tissue with no architectural residue of lymph node, which is a definition often being confusing to the extranodal extension (ENE), have been described in several malignancies and linked to a worse prognosis. In gastric cancer and colon cancer, TD and ENE should be distinguished and collected separately in 8th AJCC manual. However, in thyroid cancer, TD as a collection variable was absence in both the 8th AJCC manual and the 2015 ATA guideline. This is a study that revealed the presence of TD by reviewing a large number of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) specimens and explored its prognostic value by constructing a nomogram to accurately predict disease-free survival in PTC patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Predictive MRI Metrics for Tumor Aggressiveness in Papillary Thyroid Cancer

Papillary Thyroid Cancer

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a diagnostic technique that takes pictures of organs of the body. It uses magnetic fields and radio waves that cannot be felt. Perfusion MRI uses faster imaging. It also includes a contrast material that is given by vein. This makes specific organs, blood vessels, or tumors easier to see. Diffusion MRI lets us measure the motion of water in the tumor. Perfusion and diffusion MRI give extra information which is not available with the regular MRI. A regular MRI only shows pictures of the tumor. Thyroid MRI scans are not part of the current standard of care. The purpose of this study is to see if new MRI methods can give us more information about the tumor.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

The Role of an Optical Probe in Thyroid Cancer Diagnosis: Pilot Study

Thyroid NoduleThyroid Neoplasms1 more

This study will investigate the usefulness of an optical probe in the differentiation of thyroid cancer from normal thyroid tissue in a thyroidectomy specimen.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Hashimotos Thyroiditis and Thyroid Cancer

Thyroid CancerHashimotos Thyroiditis

Thyroid cancer (TC) is the most common endocrine malignancy. The association between inflammation and cancer is well established but the association between thyroiditis (inflammation of thyroid gland) especially Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT) and thyroid cancer remains controversial. Chronic inflammation leads to a repeated cycle of cellular damage and subsequent healing which contributes to inappropriate cell proliferation and subsequent neoplastic transformation. One of the most common forms of Thyroiditis is Hashimoto's thyroiditis which is a chronic autoimmune inflammatory disease affects almost 5% of the population and is more common in women. For the first time, Dailey and Lindsay reported in 1955 an increased association between Hashimoto's Thyroiditis (HT) and thyroid cancer. They reported 35 thyroid cancers in 278 patients with Hashimoto's Thyroiditis, a prevalence of 17.7% which they considered higher than the general population . Since then, various studies have been done, some studies have reported an increased risk of malignancy in Hashimoto's thyroiditis; others have failed to find an association. Most of the studies that have been done to identify the association between Hashimoto's thyroiditis and thyroid cancer are retrospective. The purpose of this pilot case-control study is to identify the association of Hashimoto's thyroiditis and thyroid cancer, to determine if the presence of Hashimoto's thyroiditis has any affect on the complication of thyroidectomy and prognostic factors of thyroid cancer.

Completed3 enrollment criteria
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