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Showing 1-20 of 26 trials
NCT06079671
This is a phase III, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-center, global study to explore the efficacy and safety of volrustomig in women with high-risk LACC (FIGO 2018 stage IIIA to IVA cervical cancer) who have not progressed following platinum-based CCRT.
NCT06943833
This is a phase II single-arm open-label study to investigate the efficacy and safety of volrustomig in women with FIGO 2018 stage IIIA to IVA cervical cancer who have not progressed following platinum-based concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT).
NCT07244965
This is a single-arm, phase II clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant Ivonescimab combined with paclitaxel and cisplatin (TP regimen), followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy, in patients with high-risk, locally advanced cervical cancer (FIGO stage III-IVA). Eligible participants will receive two cycles of neoadjuvant Ivonescimab plus TP chemotherapy, followed by standard concurrent chemoradiotherapy. The primary endpoints include progression-free survival (PFS) and objective response rate (ORR) following neoadjuvant treatment. Secondary endpoints include overall survival (OS), disease control rate (DCR), safety, and quality of life (EORTC QLQ-C30). Exploratory analysis will focus on identifying predictive biomarkers for Ivonescimab efficacy.
NCT05975593
This study is a dynamically adjustable prospective longitudinal study designed to capture biospecimen (biopsy, blood, surgical) and multimodal treatment-related data (imaging, dosimetry, clinical) before, during, and after treatment with definitive-intent chemoradiotherapy for patients with locally advanced cervical and pancreatic cancer.
NCT07213427
Background and Rationale: Locally advanced cervical cancer remains a major public health concern worldwide and in France. Standard-of-care management involves concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by brachytherapy, which is critical for local tumour control and survival. Conventional high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy protocols often require multiple implantations under anaesthesia, entailing increased logistical demands, operating room use, and patient discomfort. The UNICURE-HD study investigates a simplified brachytherapy approach - a single intraoperative implantation delivering all planned fractions - combined with image guidance (MRI and/or CT) and 3D dosimetry, in order to assess whether it can maintain oncological outcomes while reducing treatment complexity and resource consumption. Objectives: Primary objective: To evaluate local control at 3 and 5 years after completion of chemoradiotherapy and image-guided HDR uterovaginal brachytherapy with single implantation. Secondary objectives: To assess pelvic nodal control, para-aortic nodal control, distant control, progression-free survival, overall survival, and acute/late severe toxicities (CTCAE v5.0 ≥ grade 3). Prognostic factors will be analysed, and exploratory predictive models will be developed. Study Design: This is a retrospective, observational, multicentre study involving six French cancer centres (Pitié-Salpêtrière, Saint-Louis, Tenon, Institut de Cancérologie de Lorraine, Centre Oscar Lambret, CHU de La Réunion). Eligible patients are women ≥18 years, diagnosed with FIGO 2018 stage IB3-IV cervical cancer, treated between January 2014 and June 2024 with concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by image-guided HDR uterovaginal brachytherapy using a single implantation. Methods: Data will be extracted from medical records (electronic or paper), pseudonymised locally, and entered into a secure AP-HP-hosted database compliant with GDPR and the MR004 framework. Variables collected include demographics, tumour characteristics, EBRT details, brachytherapy technique (endocavitary vs hybrid/interstitial), dosimetric parameters (EQD2 for HR-CTV, IR-CTV, OARs), and outcomes. Imaging protocols, applicator types, and treatment times will also be recorded. Statistical analysis will use descriptive statistics, Kaplan-Meier survival estimation, log-rank tests, and multivariable Cox regression. Predictive models (LASSO, random forests) will be explored. Analyses will be conducted in R software. Sample Size: Approximately 400 patients are expected, representing all eligible cases treated over the 10-year period in the participating centres. Ethics and Regulatory Compliance: The study follows GDPR and French data protection regulations (MR004). Ethics opinion has been requested from the Sorbonne Université Ethics Committee. Each centre will retain the correspondence table linking identifiers to pseudonyms locally; no directly identifying data will be shared. Potential Impact: If the single-implantation HDR brachytherapy strategy achieves equivalent tumour control and toxicity profiles compared to multi-implant protocols, it could streamline cervical cancer management, reduce anaesthetic risk, improve patient comfort, and optimise resource use in high-volume oncology departments. This could have significant implications for accessibility and cost-effectiveness of cervical cancer care, particularly in settings with limited resources.
NCT07104149
Main Purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy and safety of Cadonilimab combined with chemotherapy (cisplatin) for locally advanced cervical cancer. This is an multicentre, single Arm, Phase 2 Trial study of Cadonilimab with Cisplatin in the treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer. 29 eligible patients will receive Cadonilimab(10mg/kg, iv., D1, q3w)with Cisplatin ( 75mg/ m2, iv., D2, q3w) for a total of 2-4 cycles before radical surgical treatment.
NCT03612791
The primary objective of this randomized phase II trial is to evaluate the clinical benefits of the addition of atezolizumab to standard chemoradiotherapy (CRT) (first given concurrently with CRT, then continued as adjuvant treatment), compared with CRT alone, on investigator-assessed progression-free survival (PFS), as per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1 (RECIST v1.1).
NCT06156514
The purpose of this phase III clinical trial, is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of concomitant chemo-radiotherapy with Cisplatin vs Gemcitabine as the first line of treatment in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer, with comorbidities and preserved renal function.
NCT06981858
This is a prospective , single - arm clinical study , aiming to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Enlansibumab sequential concurrent chemoradiotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer. Patients will first receive one cycle of Enlansibumab monotherapy (360 mg, 60 - min IV infusion on day 1, every 3 weeks). After one treatment cycle (3 weeks), they'll undergo imaging assessment. Then, they'll have Enlansibumab (360 mg, 60 - min IV infusion on day 1, every 3 weeks for two cycles) combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Chemotherapy involves cisplatin (40 mg/m²) or carboplatin (AUC2) via IV infusion, weekly (±7 days), with five planned cycles. Investigators may add a sixth platinum - based chemotherapy cycle if needed. Radiotherapy comprises EBRT and BT and must be completed within eight weeks of treatment initiation. The total prescription dose of EBRT combined with BT should have an EQD2 of ≥8000 cGy, with adjustments based on tumor regression. After concurrent chemoradiotherapy, treatment ends. An imaging assessment occurs around seven days (±3 days) later. Then, the follow - up phase begins, including final, safety, and survival follow - ups, continuing until patients are lost to follow-up, the follow-up ends, or they die.
NCT06916117
Concurrent chemoradiotherapy -immunotherapy followed by ICI maintenance was proved to improve the PFS by the Keynote-A18 in the LACC patients, and still more than 30% progressed. Neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy in LACC resulted in higher pCR rate. This prospective single arm study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant immuno-chemotherapy followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy and consolidative immunotherapy in LACC patients.
NCT06882473
The standard treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer is cisplatin-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) and Brachytherapy (BT). overall treatment time (OTT) has been found to be an important predictor of treatment response. Some studies have shown that the acceleration of tumor cell regeneration during the extension of radiotherapy leads to poor local control. Prolonging the overall treatment time of cervical cancer radiotherapy for more than 8 weeks leads to an increase in pelvic local control failure. Therefore, shortening OTT has great potential benefits from both clinical efficacy and social benefits. Shortening OTT in radical cervical cancer radiotherapy includes hypofractionated EBRT and shortening the interval between BT and EBRT. However, further shortening OTT may lead to an increase in acute and late toxicity. Adaptive radiotherapy (ART) strategies systematically monitor variations in target and neighbouring structures to inform treatment-plan modification during radiotherapy. The application of image-guided adaptive brachytherapy (IGABT) has clearly demonstrated the advantages of this approach in the treatment of cervical cancer. Previous studies have shown that the implementation of IGABT can achieve personalized treatment, dose increase, improve clinical efficacy, reduce normal tissue toxicity and side effects, and strengthen international standardized quality control. In this study, online adaptive pelvic EBRT combined with IGABT based on uRT-linac was performed under online CT guidance. The aim of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of pelvic concurrent chemoradiotherapy combined with CT-guided intracavitary brachytherapy with adaptive simultaneous dose escalation in locally advanced cervical cancer.
NCT06288373
It is a prospective, open-label, randomized, controlled phase II/III clinical trial in which patients with PD-L1-positive FIGO stage IB3, IIA2 and IIB(tumors \>4 cm in diameter)will be enrolled and randomly divided into the neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy plus surgery group and the CCRT group.
NCT05687851
Cadonilimab(AK104)is a humanized IgG1 bispecific antibody that targets PD-1 and CTLA-4. This is a single-arm, multicenter, open-label, phase II study, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Cadonilimab plus radiotherapy in participants with locally advanced cervical cancer who do not tolerate chemotherapy.
NCT03830866
This is a randomized, multi-center, double-blind, placebo-controlled, global, Phase III study to determine the efficacy and safety of durvalumab + Chemoradiotherapy versus Chemoradiotherapy alone as treatment in Women With Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer
NCT06068387
The goal of this prospective single-arm trial is to investigate the accuracy and feasibility of the para-aortic lymph node metastasis prediction model in locally advanced cervical cancer, as well as its impact on patients' prognosis. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is the para-aortic lymph node metastasis prediction model accurate and feasible? * Whether the para-aortic lymph node metastasis prediction model can affect the prognosis of patients.
NCT05378087
The study is a domestic multicenter, prospective, non-randomized controlled concurrent trial. It will be assessed whether surgery staging on locally advanced cervical cancer is superior to image staging for improving progression-free survival and overall survival.
NCT05950087
Cervical cancer CC is the most common malignant tumor in the female reproductive system, seriously endangering women's health and life, and is one of the leading causes of death for women worldwide.Globally, HPV causes about 85% of cervical cancers and about 60% of oropharyngeal cancers, causing more than 500,000 cancers each year.ctDNA is a potential biomarker because it contains tumor-specific genetic and epigenetic abnormalities that can be used in cancer diagnosis and prognosis prediction.MRD is considered a promising prognostic marker that can be used to identify individuals at increased risk of recurrence and individuals who may benefit from treatment.The expression level of MRD and plasma HPV before and after radiotherapy and chemotherapy for cervical cancer was analyzed by liquid biopsy ctDNA detection technology, which predicted the efficacy of cervical cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy, which was helpful for monitoring and estimating the risk of disease recurrence after cervical cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and verified the expression of MRD and plasma HPV as the basis for adjuvant chemotherapy after cervical cancer radiotherapy and the basis for optimal chemotherapy time node selection.
NCT05799469
This is a single-arm, single-center, exploratory study, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of envafolimab combined with Chemoradiotherapy in participants with locally advanced cervical cancer.
NCT05746156
Lymphatic mapping is a procedure in which all lymph nodes with drainage from the primary tumor, i.e. all nodes with potential (micro)metastases, can be imaged. These nodes are not necessarily suspicious on other imaging techniques. The goal of this feasibility study is to 1. investigate the feasibility of the lymphatic mapping procedure in locally advanced cervical cancer 2. study the agreement of the lymphatic map with the radiotherapy treatment plan including previous imaging (MRI / CT / FDG-PET/CT)
NCT05602831
This observational study is conducted to assess the value of using peripheral blood ctDNA to detect dynamic changes in HPV and genetic variants in predicting the prognosis of patients with locally advanced cervical cancer, as compared with traditional imaging and tumor markers.