View clinical trials related to Cholangiocarcinoma.
Filter by:This is a single center, single arm, phase II, prospective study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of HAIC combined with TAE plus an ICI and an TKI in adult patients (aged ≥18 years) with unresectable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.
Clinical Study on the efficacy and safety of HAIC(GEMOX)and Lenvatinib combined with Adebrelimab neoadjuvant therapy for resectable Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma with high-risk recurrence factors.
This study is a single-center, single-arm, open-label, phase II clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Paclitaxel Polymeric Micelles for Injection for the treatment of patients with advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma, lung cancer, gastric cancer, esophageal carcinoma, or breast cancer that are resistant to Taxanes. Subjects are given paclitaxel polymeric micelles for injection, three weeks constitutes one cycle of treatment. If subject does not develop disease progression , the subject continues treatment until disease progression (RECIST 1.1) or develops an intolerable toxicity, initiation of a new anti-cancer drug, withdrawal from the study, death, or loss of follow-up. This is a single-arm, small-sample clinical study with the primary efficacy goal of objective remission rate (ORR). The parameters of the trial were set: assuming a class I error of 0.025 unilaterally, power=90%, and a 15% improvement in ORR for objective remission rate, a total of 20 subjects would be required, and a total of 25 would be required for enrolment, taking into account a 20% shedding.
The aim of this study is to the efficacy, prognosis, adverse effects, and factors for predicting therapeutic effects and clinical prognosis of combined therapy of Drug-eluting Beads-transarterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE), lenvatinib, and anti-PD-1/ PD-L1 antibody for patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma who were initially unsuitable for the radical therapy, including resection, transplantation, or ablation.
This is an open-label, single-arm, phase 2 study. The purpose of study is to evaluate the feasibility and safety of hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy combined with lenvatinib and pucotenlimab as conversion therapy for unresectable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.
This is an open-label, single-arm, phase 2 study. The purpose of study is to evaluate the feasibility and safety of drug eluting beads-transcatheter arterial chemoembolization combined with lenvatinib and pucotenlimab as conversion therapy for unresectable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.
This phase II trial tests how well sacituzumab govitecan works in treating patients with cholangiocarcinoma that has spread to nearby tissue or lymph nodes (locally advanced), that has come back after a period of improvement (recurrent) or that has spread from where it first started (primary site) to other places in the body (metastatic). Sacituzumab govitecan is a monoclonal antibody, called hRS7, linked to a toxic agent, called SN-38. HRS7 is a form of targeted therapy because it attaches to specific molecules (receptors) on the surface of tumor cells, known as TROP2 receptors, and delivers SN-38 to kill them.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and preliminary antitumor activity of TYRA-200 in cancers with FGFR2 activating gene alterations, including unresectable locally advanced/metastatic intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and other advanced solid tumors.
Our project is a large-scale characterisation of cHCC-CCA will allow us to determine which subsets harbor actionable gene alterations. We will also aim to improve diagnosis of this tumor type by the use of immunohistochemical biomarkers and the development of deep-learning based models able to help cHCC-CCA diagnosis. This will represent an important step towards precision medicine for the patients with this highly aggressive malignancy.
The aim of the current study is to determine the potential efficacy of liver transplantation in the form of patients' overall survival (OS) after neoadjuvant systemic therapy in patients with biologically responsive locally advanced non-metastatic intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) in comparison to patients historically treated with chemotherapy alone.