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Browse 574 clinical trials for ovarian cancer. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT04072263
The clinical benefit of standard treatment for patients with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) are poor. Ovarian cancer is a highly immunogenic tumor and good survival is tightly linked to the presence of tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells and the absence of immunosuppressive immune cells. This clear correlation between T cell infiltration and disease progression suggests that EOC may be sensitive to adoptive cell therapy by infusion of ex-vivo expanded autologous Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (TIL) provided that immune suppression is reduced. Carboplatin+paclitaxel chemotherapy is directly killing tumor cells but was also shown to alleviate immunosuppression for 2 weeks coinciding with enhanced T-cell immunity, potentially creating a window of opportunity for T-cell based immunotherapy. In addition, there is evidence that interferon alpha (IFNα) not only may work as a low toxic preconditioning regimens that creates the space required for the infused TIL but that it also supports the TIL by sustaining their persistence and indirectly their function, by upregulation of HLA class I on tumor cells and decreasing the numbers of regulatory T cells. Based on this we hypothesize that a synergistic clinical effect may be obtained when adoptive cell therapy with autologous TIL is administered during treatment with chemotherapy and IFNα. The feasibility and safety of TIL administration is studied in the window of opportunity created by carboplatin-paclitaxel chemotherapy with or without interferon alpha (IFNα). Furthermore, exploratory studies will be performed to analyze and confirm the proposed underlying mechanisms. Tumor material for TIL production will be collected during first line debulking surgery in case of FIGO stage IIIC/IV disease (pre-OVACURE) or in case of recurrent platinum sensitive disease an extra biopsy can be planned (OVACURE).
NCT04815408
The main purpose of this study is to validate the efficacy and safety of anti-PD-1 in combination with neoadjuvant chemotherapy in women with advanced ovarian cancer.
NCT03000192
The purpose of this study is to invite all people diagnosed with cancer who meet the eligibility criteria to complete questionnaires before their treatment begins and at regular intervals over time to assess the impact of cancer and its treatment on people's lives in the short, medium and long term. We will explore a range of factors to determine their role in both recovery of health and well-being and self-management. Although it is known that people who have had cancer are likely to experience a number of physical and psychological problems as a result of the disease and treatment, it is not known what the 'typical' course of recovery of health and well-being looks like, how long it takes and how this can be influenced. We will determine pathways to recovery of health and well-being following cancer diagnosis (initially breast cancer diagnosed \<50 years, Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma and gynaecological cancers) and identify what factors influence this. This includes assessing the relative importance of the person's illness, personal attributes, perceived burden of treatment, role of the environment they live in, including health / social care and personal networks of support, and their ability and capacity to self-manage. We will identify who is most at risk of problems and what environmental supports and resources people are able to mobilise to support their self-management. We will also explore who has the confidence and ability to manage during and beyond treatment and what factors influence this and whether this leads to earlier problem resolution and restoration of health and well-being. This knowledge will be used to develop and test future supportive interventions to enhance the rapid recovery of health and well-being - our long term aim being to design ways of helping people with cancer in areas we identify as problematic for them.
NCT04068974
This study is intend to improve the progression-free survial of the recurrent paltinum-resistant ovarian cancer. All the participants will receive camrelizumab combined with apatinib.
NCT03213964
This is a Phase I trial to determine the maximum tolerated dose/maximum feasible dose (MTD/MFD) of a single infusion of FATE-NK100 via intra-peritoneal catheter in women with recurrent ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer meeting one of the following minimal prior treatment requirement: * Platinum resistant: may receive FATE-NK100 as 2nd line (as 1st salvage therapy). Platinum resistant is defined as disease that has responded to initial chemotherapy but demonstrates recurrence within a relatively short period of time (\< 6 months) following the completion of treatment. * Platinum sensitive: may receive FATE-NK100 as 3rd line therapy (as 2nd salvage therapy). Platinum sensitive is defined as the recurrence of active disease in a patient who has achieved a documented response to initial platinum-based treatment and has been off therapy for an extended period of time (≥ 6 months).
NCT00866697
This was a study to determine whether therapy with pazopanib was effective and safe in women with epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer whose cancer had not progressed on first line chemotherapy.
NCT04747717
This study was designed to assess the safety and efficacy of neoadjuvant therapy with mitomycin C plus cisplatin (MP) in BRCA1-mutated ovarian cancer versus standard regimen (paclitaxel plus carboplatin (TP)).
NCT02022917
This study is to determine the feasibility of postoperative platinum-based chemotherapy plus adjuvant and maintenance bevacizumab after neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by interval surgery in patients with extensive stage IIIC or IV ovarian, tubal, and peritoneal cancer.
NCT00420381
The purpose is to assess the efficacy and toxicity of the study agent, enzastaurin, in participants with recurrent or persistent ovarian cancer.
NCT04661696
Epithelial ovarian cancer is the most fatal gynecological malignancy. Despite initial therapeutic response, the majority of advanced-stage patients relapse and eventually succumb to chemoresistant disease. The majority of ovarian cancer patients with standardized treatment, including tumor cell reduction and postoperatively platinum-based combination chemotherapy, will still experience tumor recurrence and multiple recurrences within 6-18 months.With the increase in the number of recurrences, the intertherapeutic period will shorten and eventually drug resistance will emerge.The purpose of treatment for recurrent ovarian cancer is mainly to improve the quality of life of patients and prolong survival. CSPC OUYI PHARMACEUTICAL CO., LTD has successfully developed Paclitaxel (Albumin-Bound) and the bioequivalence test results show good consistency with Abraxane.To evaluate the efficacy and safety of Paclitaxel (Albumin-Bound) combination with carboplatin in Chinese patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer, this clinical study is planned.
NCT04651933
A homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) scoring model based on loss of heterozygosity (LOH) is little explored in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) patients. This study would recruit 200 Chinese EOC patients with known BRCA1/2 mutation status and resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy. A LOH-HRD model is to be constructed based on the genetic testing in these patients. The mutated genes, HRD score model and their relationship with the prognosis, would provide a full description of for the Chinese EOC patients, and a potential explanation of platinum-resistance in such population.
NCT04651946
Liquid biopsy is challenging for the diagnosis of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). In this study, we performed the methylation testing of host DNA, namely, OPCML, FODX3 and CDH13, in the peripheral serum to discover the diagnostic and supervision roles of DNA methylation in EOC patients. The study compromises two stages. In the training set, DNA methylation testing is performed in the ovarian tissues from EOC and paired benign ovarian tumor patients. The cut-off values of methylation are produced in this stage. On the meantime, serum DNA methylation testing is also performed to reveal its accordance and accuracy compared with the results of ovarian tissues. In the validation set, serum DNA methylation testing is performed in unselected ovarian tumor patients with definite cut-off values to validate its accuracy based on known histology of ovarian tumors. In training and validation sets, serum DNA methylation is also performed after major surgeries for EOC as to illustrate the changes of methylation testing, therefore, reflection the supervision role of DNA methylation.
NCT01097239
This is a single centre pilot trial to establish the feasibility and role of endoluminal HIFU in patients with locally advanced cancer within the pelvis that is either primary or recurrent and with all available current therapy inappropriate and/or exhausted. The aim is to make a preliminary assessment of efficacy \& dosage for evaluation in a randomised controlled trial. Whilst efficacy data are limited in a small feasibility study; radiological, biochemical and histopathological analysis of the patient and patient specimens, along with quality of life questionnaires (QoL), will be used to provide preliminary measures of efficacy in this patient cohort. These analyses will allow examination of the biochemical, metabolomic and histological changes associated with HIFU treatment in cancer within the pelvis.
NCT03790423
The primary objective of the trial is to test the new radio tracer 18F-ASIS for PET imaging of tissue factor (TF) expression. The tracer has the potential of identifying tumors with high levels of TF expression, which is expected to correlate with tumor aggression and prognosis. Furthermore, the tracer can potentially be used as companion imaging diagnostic agent for identifying patients eligible for TF directed therapies. This is a first-in-man study to test the radio tracer in cancer patients. Safety, biodistribution and dosimetry will be evaluated by repeated PET imaging (1 hour, 2 hours and 4 hours post-injection).
NCT00765973
A multi-center, open-label, two-arm, dose-escalation study to establish the safety, tolerability, MTD, and schedule of TLI administered intravenously as a 30 minute infusion in adult subjects with advanced solid tumors that have relapsed, are refractory to standard therapy, or for whom there is no standard therapy available. The two dosing regimens to be evaluated are: * Arm A: TLI dose on Days 1 and 8 of a 21-day treatment cycle (Starting dose: 1 mg/m2) * Arm B: TLI dose on Day 1 of a 21-day treatment cycle (Starting dose: 2 mg/m2) When one of the two arms reaches MTD, all future subjects will then be enrolled in the remaining study arm until MTD of that arm is reached.
NCT00508378
Primary Objectives: 1. To assess the preferences of women with ovarian cancer, their clinical caregivers, familial caregivers, and a control group for toxicities associated with chemotherapy. * To compare preferences of women with ovarian cancer to preferences of their clinical caregivers. * To compare preferences of women with ovarian cancer to preferences of their familial caregivers. * To compare preferences of women with ovarian cancer to preferences of a women in the control group. 2. To prospectively collect quality of life data from women with ovarian cancer. 3. To prospectively collect symptom assessment data from women with ovarian cancer.
NCT01511055
Prognosis for many carcinomas, including ovarian carcinoma, is dependent on a complete surgical resection, also known as a R0 resection. At present, the ability to perform a complete resection with negative margins is limited by the surgeon's ability to palpate and visualize the tumor and its margins. Therefore, in order to reduce operative morbidity and costs while maintaining or improving surgical and oncologic outcomes, the investigators must develop technologies that improve visualization of the primary tumor and occult metastases, real time, during surgery. Recent research has demonstrated that the use of fluorescent probes that recognize cancer specific antigens can be used for this purpose when visualized using a prototype near-infrared multispectral imaging system. This investigation will determine if folate-FITC, a fluorescent probe that recognizes the folate receptor (present in \> 90% of ovarian cancers) can facilitate surgical resection and detect tumor nodules not visible to the naked eye.
NCT02560818
This is a case-control study of molecular diagnostics. This study requires two steps: * The first part of the study will be conducted on a population of 20 women without breast cancer and, or ovarian family (Healthy Volunteers controls) * The second part of the study will be conducted on a population of 50 patients predisposed to familial breast and, or ovarian cancer compared to 20 controls . For analysis of leucocytes of the patients, a blood sample collected in a prior study (EXSAL study, ID-RCB 2009-A00833-54) will be used.
NCT04566952
PARP inhibitors have changed the treatment paradigm of ovarian cancer. Most patients using PARP(poly-ADP ribose polymerase) inhibitors will suffer different grades of adverse events(AEs), followed by dose reduction. It has not been reported whether the dose-reduced olaparib as maintenance treatment have an impact on efficacy. Both PAOLA-1 and AVANOVA 2 studies showed that combined PARP inhibitors and antiangiogenic drugs have synergistic anti-tumor effect. Anlotinib is a novel multi-target tyrosine kinase inhibitor that can inhibit VEGFR(vascular endothelial growth factor receptor), FGFR(fibroblast growth factor receptor), PDGFR(platelet-derived growth factor receptor) α/β, c-Kit, and Ret. And anlotinib has been approved as orphan drug designations for treatment of ovarian cancer by FDA in 2015. Previous studies showed that anlotinib had manageable toxicity and promising antitumor effect. Our study is expected to investigate the efficacy and safety of anlotinib combined with dose-reduced olaparib as maintenance treatment in platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer patients.
NCT04555473
This is a longitudinal observational phase II, single center, single arm study on the reliability of high grade serous ovarian carcinoma organoids obtained from primary debulking surgery (PDS)+adjuvant chemotherapy and neoadjuvant chemotherapy + interval debulking surgery (NACT+IDS) cases as model for the patients' response to treatments. Since organoids represent a model system comparable to patient-derived xenografts, the investigators tested the null hypothesis that the possibility of correctly identifying the drug-sensitivity could improve from 80%, as assessed by xenografts to at least 95%. The first step was planned to include 7 patients; if 5 or more patients do not respond, the trial will be terminated. If the trial goes on to the second stage, a total of 43 patients will be studied. Considering a patient dropout of approximately 10%, the study was planned to enroll at least 48 patients.