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8 clinical studies listed.

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Node-positive Breast Cancer

Tundra lists 8 Node-positive Breast Cancer clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT06833502

Phase II Study of Systemic Screening in Pathologic Node Positive Breast Cancer

The purpose of the study is to determine the frequency of systemic metastasis in node positive breast cancer following chemotherapy and surgery. Participants will be asked to spend about 6 months in this study. Participants will undergo a computed tomography (CT) screening of the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis at baseline prior to adjuvant radiation therapy and another CT screening of the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis at 6 months if the baseline CT is found to be negative.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-01

1 state

Breast Cancer
Node-positive Breast Cancer
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT02515110

Hypofractionated Regional Nodal Irradiation Clinical Trial for Women With Breast Cancer

Single-arm, phase 2 study evaluating hypofractionated irradiation of breast and regional nodes in women with breast cancer. Patients will be grouped in 3 surgery-related treatment groups: 1) An intact breast following lumpectomy; 2) plans for loco regional external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) following mastectomy (with or without plans for reconstruction); and 3) plans for locoregional EBRT following mastectomy with reconstruction. Patients will be assessed for lymphedema, arm function, breast or chestwall pain, other EBRT-related adverse events, and, for patients who had a lumpectomy or mastectomy with reconstruction, cosmetic outcome.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 40 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-13

1 state

Breast Cancer
Node-positive Breast Cancer
Breast Adenocarcinoma
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07276880

Preoperative Chemotherapy, Pembrolizumab and Low or High Dose RADiation in an Expansion Cohort of Node(+), Triple Negative Breast Cancer

This is a prospective radiation dose-finding, phase 2 expansion study of the Triple Negative (TN) cohort of the multicenter randomized study P-RAD (A Randomized Study of Preoperative Chemotherapy, Pembrolizumab and No, Low or High Dose RADiation in Node-Positive, HER2-Negative Breast Cancer; NCT04443348) that seeks to establish the optimal dose of radiation therapy (RT) to elicit an immune response when combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) in breast cancer patients. Eligible subjects include women or men with operable, lymph node-positive, triple negative (TN) breast cancer who are candidates for standard of care neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy (NAC) based on the KEYNOTE-522 clinical trial. Thirty-two (n=32) patients will be randomized 1:1 to receive either low RT boost (9Gy total) or high RT boost (24Gy total). All RT will be delivered to the intact breast tumor in 3 daily fractions over 3 days. In the Neoadjuvant Phase, the first cycle (C1) of pembrolizumab (200 mg i.v.) will be administered within 0-2 days of initiating RT. Participation in this study requires availability of residual diagnostic tissue biopsies of the primary tumor and metastatic lymph node for research use. If this tissue is not available, baseline research biopsies will be performed. Additionally, a research biopsy of the breast tumor and lymph node is required on Day 10-14 of C1 of pembrolizumab. After completion of the research biopsy in Week 2, the participants can commence standard-of-care neoadjuvant chemotherapy and pembrolizumab at the discretion of their medical oncology provider. After completing NAC, participants will undergo standard of care surgical resection of the breast and axillary lymph nodes, at the discretion of their surgical oncology provider. In the Adjuvant Phase, participants will receive standard of care adjuvant systemic therapy and standard of care adjuvant radiotherapy (if indicated), although recognizing that the breast tumor boost portion of this treatment has already been administered preoperatively. Except for late radiation adverse reactions of special interest, which will be followed yearly for up to 5 years, follow-up will occur every 6 months for 3 years.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-03

1 state

Breast Cancer
Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC)
HER2-Negative Breast Carcinoma
+1
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT05970107

Axillary Node Dissection w or w/o LVB in Node Positive Breast Cancer Patients

Lymphedema is a devastating complication of breast cancer surgery that decreases the quality of life of up to 40% of breast cancer survivors. Most lymphedema in breast cancer patients is because lymphatics shared between the axilla and the arm are sacrificed during axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) surgery, which removes an average of 15 lymph nodes in node positive patients. CCF's breast cancer plastic microvascular surgeons and breast surgical oncologists have collaborated to refine a surgical technique known as LVB that may be used either as a preventive measure (prophylactic LVB) or as a therapeutic intervention (therapeutic LVB). Lymphatic reconstruction with LVB may be an improvement to the current standard of care for node positive breast cancer patients undergoing ALND.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years

Updated: 2026-02-19

Node-positive Breast Cancer
RECRUITING

NCT06559540

Ultra-Hypofractionated vs. Hypofractionated Radiation for Node-Positive Breast Cancer

In breast cancer patients with nodal involvement, numerous studies have demonstrated that adjuvant radiation therapy reduces the risk of local recurrence, regional recurrence, and distant metastases, in addition to improving survival. The dose and fractionation for adjuvant breast radiation therapy has evolved over time, as novel schedules have been compared to the current standard of care. Hypofractionated radiation therapy (266 cGy per fraction x 15-16 fractions over 3 weeks) has been shown to result in equivalent oncologic outcomes, as well as equivalent acute and late toxicity, when compared to standard fractionation (200 cGy per fraction x 25 fractions over 5 weeks). Subsequently, hypofractionated breast radiation has become the current standard of care. More recently, ultra-hypofractionated breast radiation (520 cGy per fraction x 5 fractions over 1 week) was shown in a randomized trial to be non-inferior to hypofractionated radiation when treating the breast after lumpectomy. However, the efficacy and toxicity of using ultra-hypofractionated radiation therapy when also treating the regional nodes has not been reported. This is important, as there is greater radiation exposure to several normal tissues, such as the arm/shoulder, brachial plexus, normal lymphatics, heart, and lung, when treating the regional nodes. In this randomized study, the investigators aim to compare the tolerability and efficacy of ultra-hypofractionated breast/chest wall and regional nodal radiation (SWIFT RT) against hypofractionated radiation (RT). The investigators will evaluate acute and late toxicity, oncologic outcomes (including local recurrence, regional recurrence, distant metastasis, and overall survival), cosmesis, and patient-reported quality of life. The investigators will collect blood samples for correlative studies of biomarkers of fibrosis and cardiac toxicity.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-01-09

1 state

Node-positive Breast Cancer
RECRUITING

NCT05333328

OFS in Premenopausal Node+ Breast Cancer With Low Genomic Risk

Among ER+HER2- premenopausal patients with N1 who undergoes primary breast surgery, we will identify the patients with a genomic low risk using the multigene-assay (OncoFREE®). In these, ovarian function suppression with endocrine therapies including either tamoxifen or aromatase-inhibitors will be administered for 5 years.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 20 Years - 50 Years

Updated: 2025-05-22

1 state

Breast Cancer
Estrogen Receptor Positive Tumor
HER2-negative Breast Cancer
+2
RECRUITING

NCT03513614

Tailored Axillary Surgery With or Without Axillary Lymph Node Dissection Followed by Radiotherapy in Patients With Clinically Node-positive Breast Cancer (TAXIS)

RATIONALE: The use of tailored axillary dissection as a tailored procedure will avoid surgical overtreatment by selectively removing the lymph nodes that are affected by the cancer, thereby sparing many women the unnecessary complications of a radical surgery, providing a better quality of life while keeping the same efficacy. PURPOSE: The phase III trial is evaluating the optimal treatment for breast cancer patients in terms of surgery and radiotherapy.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-02-03

6 states

Node-positive Breast Cancer
RECRUITING

NCT05462457

TAD in Primary Breast Cancer With Initially ≥ 3 Suspicious Lymph Nodes

Due to high pathological complete remission (pCR) rates in both breast and lymph nodes (ypT0/Tis, ypN0) following neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) in many patients with initially clinically node-positive (cN+) breast cancer, the standard treatment of the axilla has changed from axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), which is associated with high morbidity, to less invasive, surgical approaches. In several studies, targeted axillary dissection (TAD) has presented with false-negative rates (FNRs) less than 5%, however, in patients with high initial lymph node involvement (≥ 3 clinically suspicious lymph nodes) TAD has not been thoroughly investigated. The present prospective registry study aims to evaluate the FNR of TAD in patients with ≥ 3 initially suspicious lymph nodes and clinically node-negative status (ycN0) after NST in comparison to ALND.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2023-02-15

Breast Cancer
Node-positive Breast Cancer