Plain-English translation of NCT07120529 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated ·
This is a research study comparing two different surgical approaches for women with early-stage cervical cancer. One approach uses minimally invasive (keyhole) surgery, while the other uses traditional open surgery. The study will look at long-term survival rates and how well patients recover from each type of surgery.
A major study called the LACC trial raised concerns that minimally invasive surgery for cervical cancer might not work as well as open surgery. This new study wants to see if newer surgical techniques and safeguards can make minimally invasive surgery safe and effective for treating early cervical cancer.
You likely qualify if…
You likely don't qualify if…
If you qualify, researchers will review your surgical records and medical history from your operation. You will be asked to come back for follow-up appointments and imaging scans (CT scans) to monitor your recovery and check for any cancer recurrence over time. The study is comparing outcomes between women who had minimally invasive surgery and those who had open surgery, so you would be part of whichever group matches the surgery you already received.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 24, 2026 · Not medical advice
Poland