View clinical trials related to Colorectal Neoplasms.
Filter by:The POLE mutations represent high somatic mutation loads in patients with colorectal cancer, especially in those with MMR proficient or MSS, therefore, tumors harbouring POLE mutations might be susceptible to immune checkpoint blockade. Based on these reasons, the investigators planned a phase II study of durvalumab monotherapy in patients with previously treated, metastatic, MMR deficient (MSI-H) or POLE mutated colorectal cancer.
The primary objective is to validate that the Immunoscore® test (IS0 to IS4) is able to identify patients with high risk (IS 0-1) of relapse or death whichever occurs first among Stage III patients under oxaliplatin-based adjuvant therapy. Then the prognostic value of Immunoscore® Colon to predict disease free survival (DFS) will be assessed in Stage III patients under Oxaliplatin treatment in each arm of the IDEA trial (6- months and 3-months treatment). Finally, the additive value of the Immunoscore® test to stratify the DFS will be evaluated among standard clinical and biological parameters and tumor features.
The overall goal of the Parkland-UT Southwestern Population-based Research Optimizing Screening through Personalized Regimens (PROSPR) is to optimize colon cancer screening through personalized regimens in our integrated safety-net clinical provider network, which serves a large and diverse population of under- and un-insured patients in Dallas. Together, three research projects will assess clinic, system, and organizational factors associated with over-, under- and guideline-based screening among this important population and will compare benefits, harms, and costs of strategies for facilitating optimized screening regimens. Our theme of optimizing colorectal cancer screening in a safety-net clinical provider network brings together several components. Its focus on colorectal cancer (CRC) screening which is important, because CRC is the second cancer killer in the US while being the only major cancer for which optimized screening results in primary prevention. Despite this strong potential benefit, CRC screening remains suboptimal overall, and especially among low-income and minority individuals served by safety-nets. Safety-net networks therefore offer tremendous potential for CRC prevention and control, but numerous factors at the clinics-, system-, and organization-level influence their ability to provide optimized care.
This is a prospective, multicenter, non-interventional, controlled clinical study. Evaluate MDT performance and benefit analysis in patients with advanced gastric or colorectal cancer after MDT discussion under real medical practice.
This study aims to determine the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of the sequential addition of immune-modulating therapy to standard-of-care therapy of microsatellite-stable (MSS)/mismatch repair-proficient (pMMR) metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC).
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.
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.
Study of Romiplostim for Chemotherapy-induced Thrombocytopenia in Adult Subjects with Gastrointestinal, Pancreatic, or Colorectal Cancer
This is a non-randomized study, open label phase II study. The purpose of this study is to evaluate disease control rate (DCR) by RECIST and iRECIST at 12 weeks. Evaluation of RECIST and iRECIST will be done in each center in order to choose the optimal therapy (Assessment by Investigators). A centralized evaluation of RECIST and iRECIST, will be organized in Saint-Antoine.
This phase I/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of liposomal irinotecan and rucaparib when given together with fluorouracil and leucovorin calcium and to see how well they work in treating patients with pancreatic, colorectal, gastroesophageal, or biliary cancer that has spread to other places in the body (metastatic). Chemotherapy drugs, such as liposomal irinotecan, fluorouracil, and leucovorin calcium, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. PARPs are proteins that help repair DNA mutations. PARP inhibitors, such as rucaparib, can keep PARP from working, so tumor cells can't repair themselves, and they may stop growing. Giving liposomal irinotecan and rucaparib together with fluorouracil and leucovorin calcium may work better in treating patients with pancreatic, colorectal, gastroesophageal, or biliary cancer.