CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCED ALOPECIA
Clinical trials for CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCED ALOPECIA explained in plain language.
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Cooling cap may save hair for black women on chemo
Symptom relief OngoingThis study tests whether the DigniCap scalp cooling system can prevent chemotherapy-induced hair loss in Black patients with early-stage breast cancer. About 30 participants will use the cooling cap during at least four cycles of chemo. The goal is to see if hair loss is mild eno…
Matched conditions: CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCED ALOPECIA
Phase: NA • Sponsor: George Washington University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 17, 2026 00:59 UTC
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Cool cap could keep hair on during breast cancer chemo
Symptom relief OngoingThis study tests a portable cooling cap (AMMA) worn during chemotherapy to prevent hair loss in women with early-stage breast cancer. About 40 women receiving specific chemo drugs will use the cap. The goal is to see if the cap keeps hair loss mild (Grade 2 or less) and safe.
Matched conditions: CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCED ALOPECIA
Phase: NA • Sponsor: University of California, San Francisco • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 14, 2026 12:02 UTC