View clinical trials related to Biliary Tract Neoplasms.
Filter by:Researchers want to learn if sacituzumab tirumotecan (MK-2870) alone or with chemotherapy can treat certain gastrointestinal (GI) cancers. The GI cancers being studied are either advanced (the cancer has spread to other parts of the body), or unresectable (the cancer cannot be removed with surgery). The goals of this study are to learn: - About the safety and how well people tolerate sacituzumab tirumotecan lone or with chemotherapy - How many people have the cancer respond (get smaller or go away) to treatment
This study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SHR-A1811 in patients with locally advanced unresectable or recurrent metastatic BTC with HER2 expression / amplification who failed first-line or second-line systemic treatment.
This is a single-arm, exploratory, phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy combined with adebrelimab and lenvatinib for borderline resectable, locally advanced biliary tract cancer.
The aim of the study is to evaluate technical, clinical and safety outcomes of lumen-apposing metal stent (LAMS) with a coaxial double-pigtail plastic stent (DPS) in EUS-guided choledochoduodenostomies vs cholcystogastrostomy for the management of malignant biliary obstruction in palliative patients.
The aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate temporal delay (days) between biliary drainage (EUS-CDS vs ERCP as first line therapy) and chemotherapy start in patients with borderline distal malignant biliary obstruction.
The aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate temporal delay (days) between biliary drainage (EUS-CDS vs ERCP as first line therapy) and surgery in patients with resectable distal malignant biliary obstruction.
The goal of this clinical trial is to provide evidence for the general tolerability of radiofrequency ablation (bRFA) in patients with unresectable bile duct cancer undergoing systemic palliative treatment consisting of chemotherapy (gemcitabine and cisplatin) plus durvalumab (immune-checkpoint-inhibitor, ICI). The main question it aims to answer is whether it is safe to combine chemotherapy (gemcitabine and cisplatin) and immunotherapy (durvalumab) - CICI therapy. Participants will be assigned to either the control group or the experimental group. In the control group, the standard of care consists of endoscopy with stent placement in the bile duct and CICI, whereas in the experimental group, bRFA will be performed in addition to the standard of care. Participants will be followed up for 6 months, during the follow-up, the stage of the tumor, blood examination, the duration of the stent from the insertion until its failure, adverse events and quality of life will be examined. Researchers will compare the standard of care alone to the experimental group to see if the additional bRFA procedure causes higher or no difference in adverse events rate.
A Real-World Study of Durvalumab combined with Surufatinib as maintenance therapy in patients with advanced biliary tract cancer whose disease did not progress after completion of first-line Durvalumab combined with Gemcitabine+cisplatin treatment.
This study is designed to characterize the safety, tolerability, and anti-tumor activity of MDX2001 in patients with advanced solid tumors.
This is a multicenter, single arm, prospective, open-label phase II trial investigating the clinical activity triplet regimen consisting of a combination of chemotherapy (gemcitabine/cisplatin) + trastuzumab + pembrolizumab as first-line treatment for cholangiocarcinoma and gallbladder cancer patients. Patients suffering from previously untreated HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) positive, unresectable cholangiocarcinoma and gallbladder cancer will be included in the study and are scheduled to receive triplet regimen consisting of a combination of pembrolizumab, trastuzumab and gemcitabine/cisplatin (GemCis).