View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:Adherence rate to screening colonoscopy (TC) in the average-risk general population is still unclear. Aim of this study was to compare the uptake of TC screening with that of fecal occult blood (FOBT) in the general population of different Italian areas.
The aim of the study is to determine blood concentration evolution of capecitabine and its active metabolites, in elderly patient 75 years and more.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety and possible efficacy of the use of pentamidine in the treatment of colon cancer metastasis in subjects receiving standard therapy.
Patients with oligometastatic colorectal cancer (5 metastases or less) receive a combination of systemic treatment and often local treatment, such as surgery, radiofrequency ablation and more recently stereotactic body radiotherapy. The aim of this study is to register the results and side effects of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) by means of helical tomotherapy in the treatment of oligometastatic colorectal cancer. The trial has two cohorts. Patients in cohort I get consolidation SBRT after best response on first line chemotherapy. Patients in cohort II get SBRT when there is progression under, or no indication for (further) chemotherapy. The primary endpoint is to evaluate the metabolic complete remission rate three months after the start of radiotherapy.
RATIONALE: Monoclonal antibodies, such as bevacizumab, can block tumor growth in different ways. Some block the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Others find tumor cells and help kill them or carry tumor-killing substances to them. Drugs used in chemotherapy work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Giving bevacizumab together with combination chemotherapy may kill more tumor cells. PURPOSE: This phase III trial is studying how well giving induction therapy with bevacizumab together with combination chemotherapy with or without capecitabine followed by bevacizumab maintenance therapy in treating patients with metastatic colorectal cancer that cannot be removed by surgery.
This single arm study will assess the efficacy and safety of treatment with Xeloda plus standard pelvic radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Eligible patients will receive Xeloda 825mg/m2 po bid plus standard radiotherapy for 5 weeks, followed by surgery within 6 weeks after completion of treatment. The anticipated time on study treatment is < 3 months, and the target sample size is <100 individuals.
This large randomized controlled trial is testing the effectiveness of automated telephone outreach with speech recognition to improve rates of screening for colorectal cancer. The hypothesis is that the intervention improves rates of screening overall and specifically rates of colonoscopy.
This study is a global, multicenter, open-label phase 1b and randomized, double-blinded, 2 part, phase 2 study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of rilotumumab or ganitumab in combination with panitumumab versus panitumumab alone in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer whose tumors are wild-type KRAS status.
Laparoscopic surgery has been widely accepted for its minimal invasion and safety. However, whether it has the same survival benefit as the traditional open surgery in Chinese population is still unknown. So we designed this study to evaluate the 3 year disease free survival rate in the laparoscopic group versus the open surgery group.
The purpose of this study is to evalute the response and toxicity of metastatic colorectal cancer patients to the regimen of gamma interferon added to bolus and infusional 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin (GFL) with or without bevacizumab.