View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer Metastatic.
Filter by:In North America, colorectal cancer patients with resectable liver-restricted metastases (mCRC-LR) are treated with approximately 6 months of preoperative systemic multi-agent chemotherapy. Actuarial data however supports that approximately 20% of mCRC-LR patients can be cured without as much systemic chemotherapy. Prospective phase II-III trials also support that awaiting recurrence to initiate further metastases-targeted or systemic treatment may provide patients with longer overall survival while avoiding toxicities in those without recurrence.
This is a Phase II randomized multisite trial to study the effect of a combination of local consolidative therapy with systemic therapy in subjects with oligometastatic colorectal cancer who have progressed on the first line of therapy.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cryoablation combined with Sintilimab plus regorafenib for patients with colorectal cancer liver metastasis in the third-line setting.
In patients with colorectal cancer, fatigue ranks as the number one chemotherapy-related adverse event, with 75% of patients experiencing grade 3-4 physical and psychological consequences. Metastatic progression and increasing number of courses of chemotherapy are also aggravating factors. In this study, the investigator will evaluate the feasibility of two standardized interventions aimed at reducing fatigue in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. One of the two interventions will focus on hypnosis sessions while the other will implement Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) sessions.
This prospective, single arm study aims to evaluate the preoperative neoadjuvant safety of Sintilimab combined with XELOX plus bevacizumab in colorectal patients with liver metastasis and pMMR/MSS status.
Bowel obstruction is a common complication in patients with ovarian, peritoneal and bowel cancer due to a mass or spread of disease, causing narrowing to the gut, as these cancers can grow on the bowel surface. Certain foods may lead to symptoms such as pain, bloating, feeling full, feeling sick, vomiting and difficulty passing a bowel motion. There is limited evidence to establish the best diet to follow when someone is diagnosed with the risk of bowel obstruction and is experiencing symptoms after eating and drinking. The Dietitians at the Royal Surrey have developed a 4 stage bowel obstruction diet which they have been using with patients for 3 years. The 4 stages are clear fluids, all thin liquids, low fibre soft smooth diet, low fibre soft sloppy diet. Depending on the severity of symptoms and the risk of a blockage, patients are asked to follow a certain stage of the diet. They are advised to move up and down the stages as symptoms improve or get worse. This feasibility study aims to investigate if the diet can be used and is effective in clinical practice. The objectives are to see if this diet is easy to follow, can reduce symptoms of bowel obstruction, can improve quality of life, and reduce admissions to hospital because of bowel blockages. Patients at risk of bowel obstruction from colorectal or ovarian cancer are eligible to participate. They will remain in the study for a period of 4 weeks, during which time they will be asked to complete a diet diary and 3 questionnaires.
Currently, comprehensive treatments for liver metastasis/pulmonary metastasis that cannot reach NED include systemic chemotherapy, interventional chemotherapy, molecular targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and local treatments (ablation therapy, radiation therapy, etc.) for liver metastases. Combination therapy model of local ablation, systemic chemotherapy, and anti-PD -1 monoclonal antibody hopefully can prolong patient survival. This trial will evaluate the effectiveness and safety of carrelizumab combined with microwave ablation and chemotherapy in the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastasis/pulmonary metastasis
Regorafenib has demonstrated a significant benefit in overall survival in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. However, more than 50% of patients had severe adverse events (grade 3-4), leading to temporary or definitive discontinuation of treatment. The RePERSO study proposes to adapt the regorafenib dose regimen taking into account firstly the measurement of sum of metabolites M-2 and M-5 and secondly the occurrence of toxicity during treatment. This treatment personalization through therapeutic drug monitoring pharmacological dosing optimization strategy aims at validating the proof of concept of regorafenib therapeutic drug monitoring and at improving the benefit in OS in patients, using the previously defined Csum therapeutic range.
The registry aims to collect and analyse information on the antineoplastic treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, treated in palliative intention in daily routine practice in Germany.
PRELUDE-1 study is a pilot intervention trial that aims to describe the immunologic and genetic evolutions induced by stereotactic body radiationtherapy (SBRT) treatment in oligometastatic Colorectal Cancer (omCRC) patients with two-three nodules lung-limited disease.