View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:Apatinib has been proved to be effective and safe among patients in advanced colorectal cancer in several trials. the investigators aimed to evaluate its efficacy and safety as the neoadjuvant therapy in real world practice, and to explore factors associated with efficacy.
The purpose of this study is to investigate treatment with nivolumab in combination with trametinib with or without ipilimumab in participants with previously treated cancer of the colon or rectum that has spread.
The aim of this study is to investigate the interaction between intake of vitamin D and polymorphisms in GC and CYP2R1 in relation to risk of colorectal cancer in a Danish prospective cohort study.
Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common types of cancer in Denmark, and mortality among patients is high. Patients presenting with alarm symptoms of CRC are referred to colonoscopy in the cancer patient pathway for CRC. However, the proportion of patients with alarm symptoms who have CRC is below 10%. Simultaneously, the burden on endoscopy units to conduct fast-track colonoscopies is growing. Occult blood in the faeces may be an early sign of cancer or precancerous lesions, and can be detected by an immunochemical faecal occult blood test (iFOBT). Few studies have examined the diagnostic properties of the iFOBT among symptomatic patients, and reported sensitivities ranging from 88%-100%, specificities from 77%-94%, and negative predictive values from 98%-100%. These results were derived from diverse patient populations, and used different cut-offs to define positive test results. Using iFOBT may be a valuable tool for the GP when deciding on referral of the patient to the cancer patient pathway. However, evidence is needed on the diagnostic accuracy of the test to detect CRC among patients presenting with alarm symptoms. Hypothesis: In patients presenting with alarm symptoms of CRC, detection of faecal occult blood by iFOBT is an accurate measure of the presence of colonic lesions. Aim: The aim of the study is to examine the diagnostic accuracy of the iFOBT among symptomatic patients referred to colonoscopy in the cancer patient pathway for CRC. Materials and methods: The project is conducted as a diagnostic accuracy study. Patients appointed for colonoscopy will be invited to collect a faecal sample and mail it for analysis. The iFOBT result will be registered in a computer-based laboratory information system. The result of the colonoscopy will be registered in Danish national health registries. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value will be calculated as measures of the diagnostic properties of the iFOBT, using the result of colonoscopy as the reference standard. The accuracy of the test by type of alarm symptom will also be assessed. Perspectives: The study will provide new and valuable data to evaluate the referral criteria for the cancer patient pathway. Given a good discriminatory ability of the iFOBT among symptomatic patients, fast-track colonoscopy may not be necessary as a first-choice examination in the diagnostic work-up of these patients.
Background: Many people with colorectal cancer get liver metastases. Standard treatment for this is a combination of chemotherapy drugs. Directing the chemotherapy to the liver may be effective. A device that does this a pump that delivers drugs over 2 weeks at constant rate into the hepatic artery. The person s body temperature causes the drug to flow from the pump. Researchers want to see if this helps people with colorectal metastases to the liver. Objective: To study the effectiveness of a hepatic artery infusion pump at treating colorectal metastases to the liver. Eligibility: Adults at least 18 years old with colorectal metastases to the liver Design: Participants will be screened with: Medical history Physical exam Heart, blood, and urine tests Scans Participants will stay in the hospital a few days. A small plastic tube (catheter) will be inserted in an artery into the liver. The catheter will be attached to the pump. That will lie under the skin on the abdomen. It will be small and participants will be able to feel it. Participants will get treatment in 28-day cycles. Every Day 1, they will have physical exam, symptom review, and blood tests. Every 2 weeks, they will come to the clinic to get chemotherapy by a catheter or port. Every 12 weeks, they will have a scan. Tissue samples may be taken during the study. When they finish the drug, participants may have the pump removed. They will repeat the Day 1 tests. They will be called every 6 months to see how they are doing.
This is a prospective study investigating the disease course of patients with colorectal cancer that have had their cancer spread to their liver. The aim of this study is find potential biomarkers for disease recurrence and therapeutic targets for prognostic information.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer in American men and women with ≥130,000 new cases each year. Several dietary patterns have been associated with CRC risk but underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Researchers thus propose to integrate dietary patterns and metabolomics data to comprehensively investigate biological pathways linking dietary patterns and CRC risk.
This is a prospective-retrospective study to determine if the expression of the miRNA's miR-31-3p and miR-31-5p are prognostic of patient outcomes or predictive of the benefit from anti-EGFR therapy in stage III Colon Cancer. The present study will utilize FFPE tumor samples collected from patients enrolled in the PETACC-8 study conducted by the Fédération Francophone de Cancérologie Digestive (FFCD). This phase 3 clinical trial prospectively randomized fully resected stage III colon cancer patients to receive adjuvant treatment with either FOLFOX-4 plus cetuximab or FLOFOX-4 alone.
Surgery is a stressful procedure associate with perioperative physical impairment. In a previous study, the investigators showed that physical fitness could be optimize in surgical patients using prehabilitation, a preoperative conditioning intervention in form of exercise, nutrition and relaxation technique. The best modality of exercise has yet to be known.The purpose of this study is to compare high interval (HIT) vs. moderate continuous intensity (MC) training, integrated in a prehabilitation intervention in colorectal surgical patients.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common type of cancer among men and the second among women in Brazil. Despite the high incidence and significance of CRC in Brazil, very little is known about its prevalence among the asymptomatic population. Recently, a CRC screening program was implemented at the Cancer Hospital of Barretos. Characterization of the clinical findings detected in the screening population and the prevalence of basal CRC might contribute to better organization of the program and define the best strategy for a future national screening program. We hypothesize that recruitment and the early outcomes of our screening program based on the fecal immunochemical test (FIT) will differ from the outcomes corresponding to other populations due to sociodemographic differences. Aims: i. To implement a data collection and storage system for follow-up of the screening program participants and to measure early outcomes (adenoma, advanced adenoma and cancer) and associate them with sociodemographic risk factors; ii. to quantify the risk of CRC in the Brazilian population and to develop algorithms for risk stratification of CRC screening; and iii. to compare the risk stratification to other countries with low, medium and high incomes. Methods: Individuals aged 50 to 65 years will be included in the HCB screening program from November 2017 to December 2018. The following data will be collected from all participants: sociodemographic and ethnic (skin color) characteristics; risk factors for CRC, such as smoking and drinking; comorbidities, including diabetes mellitus and arterial hypertension; and FIT, colonoscopy and histopathology examination results. Data collection will be performed using the REDCap data collection/database system. The risk score will be formulated using the Chi-square test (or Fisher's exact test) and simple logistic regression, and the regression coefficients will be calculated. Then, the model identified for the training sample will be replicated with a validation sample. The resulting score will be used to calculate the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, accuracy, area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and Kolmogorov D statistic.