RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
Clinical trials for RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY explained in plain language.
Never miss a new study
Get alerted when new RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY trials appear
Sign up with your email to follow new studies for RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY, keep track of the ones that matter, and come back to a personal dashboard instead of checking manually.
By submitting, you agree to our Terms of use
-
New scaffold aims to stop leaks after prostate surgery
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests a special scaffold placed during prostate removal surgery to help men regain bladder control and stop stress urinary incontinence (leaking urine when coughing, sneezing, or moving). About 266 men will be randomly assigned to get the scaffold or standard care. Res…
Matched conditions: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
Phase: PHASE3 • Sponsor: Levee Medical, Inc. • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 15, 2026 11:53 UTC
-
New drug shows promise in High-Risk prostate cancer before surgery
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests a drug called REGN5678 in men with high-risk prostate cancer before they have surgery to remove the prostate. The goal is to see if the drug is safe and how it affects the cancer. About 42 men will take part in this early-phase trial.
Matched conditions: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
Phase: PHASE1, PHASE2 • Sponsor: M.D. Anderson Cancer Center • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 14, 2026 12:05 UTC
-
New study: simple Pre-Surgery program may cut prostate surgery leakage
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests whether a structured nurse-led education session and direct referral to pelvic floor physiotherapy before prostate removal surgery can reduce urine leakage afterward. About 80 men scheduled for prostate cancer surgery will be randomly assigned to either standard …
Matched conditions: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 11, 2026 20:54 UTC
-
PSA after prostate surgery: a crystal ball for cancer spread?
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study follows 500 men who had their prostate removed for cancer. Researchers check PSA levels soon after surgery to see if they can predict if the cancer will come back or spread. No new treatments are given—just standard care and observation.
Matched conditions: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
Sponsor: Lithuanian University of Health Sciences • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated May 17, 2026 04:13 UTC