Oncology Cardiology / Cardiovascular Respiratory / COPD / Asthma Infectious Disease Gastroenterology Neurology Rheumatology Diabetes / Metabolic Mental Health / Psychiatry Women's Health Dermatology Men's Health Rare Diseases
Clinical Trial Active — Not Recruiting NCT06466720

Measuring and Mapping Cognitive Decline After Brain Radiosurgery

Measuring and Mapping Cognitive Decline After Brain Radiosurgery — Active Not Recruiting • Oncology • NCT06466720.

📅 04 May 2026 ⏱ 2 min read
Active — Not Recruiting
Check the registry for current status and eligibility criteria.
Status
Active — Not Recruiting
NCT ID
NCT06466720
Start
2024-06-21
Completion
2026-06-30
ClinicaliQ Trial Snapshot
  • Measuring and Mapping Cognitive Decline After Brain Radiosurgery — Active Not Recruiting • Oncology • NCT06466720.
  • Study tests whether brain radiosurgery for tumours damages thinking ability and identifies brain areas at risk to spare during future treatment.

Verify eligibility, endpoints and current status on the original ClinicalTrials.gov registry before acting on this summary.

Use This Page For
  • Quick orientation before opening the registry record.
  • Checking recruitment status, phase and sponsor at a glance.
  • Connecting this trial to nearby guidelines, Drug Science and education.
What This Trial Is Studying

Background Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS) is a localised radiotherapy treatment for patients with brain metastases or other benign tumours in the brain, like meningiomas. The Investigators do not currently know if, or how much, SRS affects brain function. Patients with brain tumours do not get tested routinely for their brain function. Understanding short- and long-term side-effects is important for SRS. Brain metastases patients have short life expectancies (6-months to 1-year). However, meningioma patients can live 10 years or more. SRS is used to treat both. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment will be…

Full Trial Details
View this trial on the source registry
Eligibility criteria, protocol, and results when available
View Trial ↗
Share: Twitter/X LinkedIn
Related

Related Clinical Intelligence

Guidelines, Drug Science, safety briefs and education connected to this trial area.

Guideline
Ripretinib for treating advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumours after 3 or more kinase inhibitors
Oncology · 28 Apr 2026
Ripretinib is recommended as an option for adults with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumours who have received 3 or more prior kinase inhibitors…
View guideline →
Clinical Brief
Ultrasound delays putting pregnant women and cancer patients at risk, sonographers say
Oncology · BBC Health · 28 Mar 2026
Ultrasound service capacity is insufficient due to inadequate sonographer training, creating delays that compromise care for pregnant women and cancer patients requiring…
View brief →
Guideline
Pembrolizumab for neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment of resectable locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
Oncology · 21 Apr 2026
Pembrolizumab is recommended as neoadjuvant treatment prior to surgery for resectable locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, followed by adjuvant…
View guideline →
Clinical Brief
MPs call for sunbed advertising ban to help prevent skin cancer
Oncology · BBC Health · 13 May 2026
A cross-party parliamentary report identifies that most skin cancer cases are preventable, supporting calls for stricter regulation of sunbed advertising as a…
View brief →
Clinical Brief
I feared my son had a brain tumour but he’d been poisoned with vitamin D
Oncology · BBC Health · 16 Apr 2026
Vitamin D toxicity can present with neurological symptoms mimicking serious pathology such as brain tumours, necessitating consideration in differential diagnosis when imaging…
View brief →
Guideline
Bladder Cancer: Diagnosis and Management (NICE NG2)
Oncology · 27 Mar 2026
Blue light cystoscopy with hexaminolevinate improves detection of recurrent bladder tumours compared to white light cystoscopy alone, particularly for carcinoma in situ.…
View guideline →