RC48-ADC in Adjuvant/Salvage Treatment of HER2 Positive Non-muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer
Non-muscle Invasive Bladder CancerThis study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of intravenous RC48-ADC in adjuvant/salvage treatment of HER2 positive high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
ctDNA in Subjects With Muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer Treated With Trimodality Therapy
Bladder CancerMuscle-Invasive Bladder CarcinomaThe purpose of this prospective biospecimen collection study is to evaluate the feasibility of measuring circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in subjects with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) treated with trimodality therapy consisting of a maximal transurethral resection of bladder tumor followed by radiation and concomitant chemotherapy. Cancer cells have unique genes that determine the characteristics of tumors, such as how they will respond to different treatments. The tumor tissue will be used to determine the genes present in cancer cells. Tumor cells sometimes release fragments of DNA into the blood or urine (circulating tumor DNA or ctDNA) and measuring levels of ctDNA may be a way to monitor cancer and predict to determine which treatment works better and what will be the outcome of cancer. Urine, blood, and tumor tissue are called biospecimens. Biospecimens can help researchers understand how the human body works. Researchers may develop new tests to monitor diseases or new ways to treat diseases. Plasma and urine specimens will be collected before, during, and after the standard-of-care treatment. This study will estimate the feasibility of collecting plasma ctDNA detection in subjects with MIBC. If this information can be successfully collected and processed, the usefulness of ctDNA to predict tumor response to certain kinds of treatment or disease progression will be evaluated.
Impact of COMORBIDities After Radical Cystectomy Using a Predictive Method With Artificial Intelligence...
Bladder CancerComorbidity1 moreClinician and the multidisciplinary team meeting in oncologic urology (MMO) play a key-role in the decision making. An unexplained surgeon attributable variance, probably linked to the subjective "eyeball test" effect, was identified as a strongest factor underlying non-compliance with guide line recommendations in the management of bladder cancer. So high-quality studies that identify barriers and modulators (such as comorbidities) of provider-level adoption of guidelines and how comorbidities are associated in making therapeutic choice and their impact in bladder cancer specific survival and overall survival, are crucial. To identify patients at high risk of early death, and to improve specific guideline for treatment might be decisive. In order to assess survival, where mortality events compete, it will be more appropriate to compute a Cumulative Incidence Function (namely CIF). The investigators will compare outcomes across patient populations to obtain information to improve clinical decision-making. Such learning will be done through the use of neural networks or by applying population-based approaches, such as Genetic Algorithms (GA), Ant Colony Systems (ACS) and Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO), using as a four-stage based approach. First, the investigators propose a "pretopology space" in order to study a dynamic phenomenon. Second, the investigators recall that the K-means approach remains one of the most used approaches for classifying a set of elements (patients / persons / others) into K (disjunctive) clusters. Third, the investigators propose a learning pretopology space for enhancing the clustering. Such an approach can be assimilated in spirit to one applied with high success on deep learning. Fourth and last, the investigators propose a reactive method that is able to include some new elements or remove some contained elements
To Better Understand the Most Important Factors for Patients When They Decide on the Type of Treatment...
Muscle Invasive Bladder CancerSurgery3 moreThrough our study, we aim to understand the most important factors for patients when they decide on the type of treatment they receive for MIBC. Our study consists of a discrete choice experiment (DCE): a type of questionnaire used to elicit preferences in the absence of data. DCEs are frequently used in oncological research to elicit preferences from participants without directly asking them to state their preferred options. Participants undertaking our DCE questionnaire will presented with a series of alternative hypothetical scenarios containing several variables or "attributes" (5), each of which may have a number of variations or "levels".
Personalized Immune Cell Therapy Targeting Neoantigen of Malignant Solid Tumors
CarcinomaMelanoma2 moreThis single center, single arm and prospective study aimed to establish gene mutation database and select the neoantigens in patients with advanced malignant melanoma, bladder cancer and colorectal cancer. Then, we intended to explore the safety and efficacy of individual tumor antigen-sensitized DC vaccine and their sensitized T cells in these solid cancers.
Feasibility Study to Investigate Rectal Mucus in Aero-Digestive Tract Cancer.
Non Small Cell Lung CancerGastric Adenocarcinoma3 moreThe aim of the study is to assess the feasibility of genomic and epigenetic analysis of rectal mucus to detect non-colorectal cancers of the aero- digestive tract using samples collected by the OriCol™ Sampling Device. The primary objective of the study is to assess whether significant changes in DNA mutation and methylation associated with Non-colorectal cancers of the Aero- digestive Tract (NCRCADT) can be detected in rectal mucus as shed cells and cell-free DNA (cfDNA) pass through the gut and theoretically can be collected from rectal mucus. Secondary objectives will assess the participant acceptability of the OriCol™ Sampling Device for Upper GI and Lung Pathology as well as contributing to a genomic library collating information about rectal mucus.
Blue Light Cystoscopy With Cysview® Registry
Bladder CancerRegistry study to gather more information on the current use of Blue Light Cystoscopy with Cysview (BLCC) in urologists' practices.
The iBlad App - a National, Exploratory Study on a Multimodality Smartphone App for Bladder Cancer...
Bladder CancerThe aims of this project are: to develop and implement a national multimodality application for patients with bladder cancer that builds upon knowledge from the iBLAD study. to investigate how the app, containing PRO questions on symptoms and QoL, information for health care providers, and peer-to-peer advice, can provide more knowledge on symptoms, QoL, and the need for supportive care. to examine the usability of and patient satisfaction with the app using qualitative methods.
Copanlisib and Avelumab as a Maintenance Therapy for Advanced Bladder Cancer
Advanced Urothelial CarcinomaPatients with metastatic bladder cancer are usually treated with chemotherapy. If their cancers do not progress after chemotherapy, they can be enrolled into this study and receive a standard-of-care immunotherapy medication named avelumab plus a study drug named copanlisib.
Pre-Habilitation With Mindfulness and Exercise for Patients Undergoing Radical Cystectomy (PRIMER...
Bladder CancerNon-muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer1 moreThe PRIMER (Pre-Habilitation With Mindfulness and Exercise for Patients Undergoing Radical Cystectomy) trial is a pilot designed to estimate the feasibility of integrating a home-based pre-operative exercise and mindfulness program (pre-habilitation program) for patients scheduled to undergo radical cystectomy for bladder cancer in an attempt to improve both physical and psychological conditioning pre-operatively.