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Found 43 Actively Recruiting clinical trials

A

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating two surgical procedures, bilateral salpingectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, to see how well they reduce the risk of ovarian cancer in women who have BRCA1 gene mutations. The study aims to determine if removing just the fallopian tubes (bilateral salpingectomy) is almost as effective as removing both the fallopian tubes and ovaries (bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy) in lowering ovarian cancer risk. This trial also assesses symptoms related to estrogen loss, quality of life, sexual function, cancer-related distress, decision-making about surgery, and treatment side effects in these patients. Participants choose between two groups: one group undergoes bilateral salpingectomy and may have their ovaries removed later, while the other group undergoes bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. Both groups receive pelvic or transvaginal ultrasounds or pelvic MRI scans during screening, and blood samples are collected throughout the trial. Ancillary studies include quality-of-life assessments and questionnaires. The study also collects tissue and blood samples for future research. After surgery, participants have follow-up visits at 10 to 60 days, then at 6, 12, and 24 months, and annually for up to 20 years. Researchers monitor the time until any high-grade serous carcinomas develop, specifically ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancers. They also track menopausal symptoms, sexual function, quality of life, cancer distress, medical decisions about surgery, and any adverse events during this long-term follow-up.

Age: 35Years - 50YearsFEMALEPhase Not Applicable
549 locations
A

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness of active surveillance and chemotherapy treatments in pediatric, adolescent, and adult patients with low risk and standard risk germ cell tumors. This phase III trial focuses on monitoring patients after tumor removal and comparing the outcomes of carboplatin-based versus cisplatin-based chemotherapy regimens. The study aims to maintain high overall survival rates for low risk patients and to compare event-free survival between the two chemotherapy options in standard risk patients. Additional objectives include assessing side effects such as hearing loss and neuropathy, and exploring tumor marker changes and other biological measures related to treatment outcomes. Patients with low risk stage I germ cell tumors undergo surgery followed by observation, with the option to transfer to standard risk treatment if the tumor recurs. Those with standard risk tumors are randomly assigned to one of four chemotherapy regimens combining bleomycin, etoposide, carboplatin, or cisplatin. Treatments are given intravenously on specific schedules every 21 days for up to 3 or 4 cycles, depending on the group. Throughout the trial, patients receive imaging scans, blood tests, tumor biopsies if needed, and pulmonary function tests to monitor treatment response and side effects. Participants are closely followed after treatment completion with regular visits every 2 months for the first year, then less frequently up to 10 years. Researchers collect data through imaging, blood samples, lung tests, and questionnaires to measure survival, disease recurrence, and side effects like hearing loss. The study also includes exploratory analyses of tumor markers and patient-reported outcomes to better understand treatment impacts and improve future care for germ cell tumor patients.

All GendersPhase 3
629 locations
A

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are investigating the addition of an immunotherapy drug called durvalumab to standard chemotherapy treatment in patients with MammaPrint High 2 Risk (MP2) stage II-III hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative breast cancer. This phase III trial aims to compare the effectiveness of usual chemotherapy alone versus chemotherapy combined with durvalumab. Immunotherapy with durvalumab may help the immune system attack cancer cells and prevent tumor growth and spread, while chemotherapy drugs like paclitaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide work to stop cancer cells from growing or dividing. Previous studies suggest patients with an MP2 result might respond better to this combined treatment approach. Participants first undergo MammaPrint testing to confirm MP2 status before randomization into two groups. One group receives paclitaxel intravenously on days 1 and 8 every 14 days for 6 cycles, followed by doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide intravenously on day 1 every 14 days for 4 cycles. The other group receives the same chemotherapy schedule plus durvalumab intravenously over 60 minutes on specified cycles during both chemotherapy phases. Mammography is performed during screening, and optional tissue and blood samples are collected for future studies. Throughout the study, participants are monitored through various assessments including imaging, physical exams, laboratory tests, and quality of life questionnaires focusing on fatigue and physical and mental health. Researchers track breast cancer event-free survival and other outcomes such as treatment side effects and response rates. After completing treatment, patients are followed for up to 10 years or until death to evaluate long-term outcomes and safety.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 3
536 locations
A

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating the addition of olaparib, a PARP inhibitor, as maintenance therapy following surgery and chemotherapy in patients with pancreatic cancer that has been surgically removed and who have a pathogenic mutation in BRCA1, BRCA2, or PALB2 genes. This phase II randomized, double-blind study aims to determine if olaparib can improve relapse-free survival compared to placebo in these patients, who have completed perioperative chemotherapy and have no evidence of recurrent disease. Participants are randomly assigned to receive either olaparib or a placebo orally twice daily in 28-day cycles for up to 12 cycles, as long as there is no disease progression or unacceptable side effects. Throughout the treatment period, patients undergo imaging tests such as CT scans or MRI and blood sample collections. After completing the treatment cycles, patients are followed up at 30 days, every 4 months for the first year, and then every 6 months for up to 10 years after randomization to monitor their health and disease status. During the study, researchers assess relapse-free survival by documenting any return of cancer or death from 22 to 44 months after randomization. They also collect blood samples and perform imaging tests to monitor the disease and evaluate treatment effects. Safety is carefully monitored, and patients must have recovered from previous treatments before starting the study. The study includes long-term follow-up to observe survival outcomes and any differences based on genetic mutations or prior chemotherapy regimens.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 2
453 locations
B

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness and safety of BMS-986489, a fixed-dose combination of atigotatug and nivolumab, compared to durvalumab in participants with limited-stage small-cell lung cancer (LS-SCLC). This Phase 2, open-label, randomized study focuses on consolidation therapy following standard chemoradiotherapy in participants without disease progression. Atigotatug is a novel antibody targeting fuc-GM1 on tumor cells, and when combined with nivolumab, an immune checkpoint inhibitor, it may enhance antitumor effects. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either BMS-986489 or durvalumab as consolidation therapy. Both treatments are given as intravenous infusions once every 4 weeks for up to 2 years. Before randomization, participants must have completed concurrent chemotherapy (including platinum and etoposide) and radiotherapy without progression. Prophylactic cranial irradiation may be given before starting study treatment, following institutional guidelines. During the study, participants will be monitored regularly for overall survival up to 5 years from randomization, with assessments every 8 to 12 weeks depending on treatment status. Researchers will evaluate safety and efficacy through clinical examinations, imaging scans, laboratory tests, and adverse event monitoring. Participants are expected to follow contraceptive guidelines and maintain follow-up visits as outlined in the protocol.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 2
33 locations
C

Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating how well carboplatin chemotherapy works before surgery in men with high-risk prostate cancer who have inherited mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. This phase II trial aims to see if carboplatin can shrink tumors and lead to complete removal of cancer cells at the time of prostatectomy. The study also monitors progression-free survival, metastasis-free survival, overall survival, and treatment side effects. Additionally, specimens are collected for future research. Participants receive carboplatin intravenously before undergoing prostate surgery. If prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels rise after surgery, patients undergo imaging tests such as CT, MRI, chest X-ray, or PSMA PET scans to monitor for cancer spread. Blood samples are collected throughout the trial to support further study and evaluation. During the study, participants have physical exams, medical history assessments, and laboratory tests including blood counts and liver and kidney function within 28 days before enrollment. Researchers track PSA progression and survival outcomes for up to five years after treatment. The trial includes regular imaging and safety monitoring to assess treatment effects and disease status over time.

Age: 18Years +MALEPhase 2
133 locations
C

Actively Recruiting

Healthy Volunteer

Researchers are evaluating a genome-wide methylome enrichment platform to detect multiple types of cancer and to differentiate among them. This study is observational and includes people with various cancers such as brain, breast, bladder, cervical, colorectal, endometrial, esophageal, gastric, head and neck, hepatobiliary, leukemia, lung, lymphoma, multiple myeloma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, renal, sarcoma, and thyroid cancers. The platform's ability to detect minimal residual disease and relapse early will be assessed specifically in lung cancer patients, chosen due to available treatments and clinical relevance. Participants include those with cancer and those without known cancer. Blood samples and clinical data will be collected at the start. Participants with certain lung cancers will have additional blood draws after completing first-line treatment every 3 months during the first year and every 6 months for the next 2 years. Other cancer cases may have yearly follow-ups for 3 years. Control participants without cancer will have clinical follow-up every 6 months for up to 3 years. The test uses a sensitive epigenomic method analyzing cell-free DNA without degrading it, enriching methylated DNA, followed by sequencing. During the study, participants will provide blood samples and clinical information at scheduled intervals depending on their group. Researchers will measure cancer detection and monitor for minimal residual disease or relapse over 24 months. Results from the test will not be shared with participants or doctors. Clinical follow-up will continue up to 3 years to observe participants' cancer status and health outcomes.

Age: 40Years +All Genders
17 locations
C

Actively Recruiting

The goal of this trial is to determine the efficacy of advanced cognitive training for cancer survivors suffering from cancer- and cancer-treatment-related cognitive dysfunction. For millions of cancer survivors, cognitive dysfunction is a prevalent, severe, and persistent problem that has long been associated with poor work-related and health-related outcomes. Evidence suggests that a significant subset of breast cancer survivors (BCS) incur cognitive changes that may persist for years after treatment. Unfortunately, the scientific basis for managing these cognitive changes is extremely limited. Available evidence from pilot studies, including our work, suggests that advanced cognitive training, which is based on the principles of neuroplasticity (ability of brain neurons to re-organize and form new neural networks), may be a viable treatment option. However, previous trials to date have been limited by lack of attention-controlled designs, small samples of BCS, or limited outcome measures. Therefore, to overcome limitations of past studies and build on our pilot results, the purpose of this 2-group, double-blind, randomized controlled trial is to conduct a full-scale efficacy trial to compare advanced cognitive training to attention control in BCS.

Age: 18Years - 100YearsAll GendersPhase Not Applicable
680 locations
C

Actively Recruiting

Healthy Volunteer

Researchers are collecting blood and tissue samples from people with and without cancer to study and evaluate tests that could help detect cancer early. The goal is to create a blinded reference set of samples to validate blood-based tests for early detection of multiple types of cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma, breast, lung, and others. The study also aims to assess how well these tests perform at the time of initial cancer diagnosis, considering different tumor types and cancer stages. Participants complete a baseline questionnaire and provide blood samples at registration and again 12 months later. Those diagnosed with cancer may also provide tissue samples at these times. The study includes patients aged 40 to 75 years, with cancer diagnoses at various stages or individuals without cancer. Special procedures are in place for patients with high suspicion of certain cancers before confirmation. During the study, researchers collect detailed information through questionnaires, blood draws, and tissue sampling to analyze test accuracy. Participants are monitored for up to one year after registration to follow outcomes. The primary measure is providing this blinded set of blood samples to help validate future cancer detection tests, supporting research that could improve early diagnosis and treatment.

Age: 40Years - 75YearsAll Genders
746 locations
C

Actively Recruiting

This research collects data and biological samples from patients who have experienced side effects from immunotherapy treatments for cancer. The goal is to create a national collection of these samples and clinical information to help future studies understand, predict, prevent, and treat serious immune-related side effects, rare infections, or rapid tumor growth after immunotherapy. Participants provide tissue and blood samples when they join the study and again one month later. Some patients may also provide stool samples if they have certain side effects like colitis. Researchers also review participants' medical records for up to one year to gather detailed health information related to their treatment and side effects. During the study, patients undergo sample collections and have their health records examined. The main outcome measured is the establishment of a national biorepository containing these samples and data, which will be used in future research over the course of one year. This study aims to support better understanding and management of immunotherapy side effects in cancer treatment.

All Genders
626 locations

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