View clinical trials related to Esophageal Cancer.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of Anti-PD-1 antibody SHR-1210 plus apatinib versus SHR-1210 as second-line treatment of advanced esophageal squamous cell.
To evaluate the pharmacokinetics and safety of Larotinib in subjects with mild and moderate hepatic function impairment and healthy subjects in a single-center, non-randomized, open, single-dose administration
Efficacy and Safety of Anlotinib combined with PD-1 inhibitors as 2 or more lines treatment for Heavily Pretreated Patients With Advanced, Metastatic Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Esophagus.
This study investiagates deep-regional or superficial hyperthermia to enhance radiotherapy or chemoradiation in patients that suffer recurrent disease after previous radiotherapy.
Cancers of the upper gastro-intestinal tract, including esophagus (gullet), stomach and small bowel, are amongst the deadliest malignancies. The main reason for their high mortality rate is that they are usually diagnosed late when curative treatments are no longer effective. However, these types of cancer generally arise from well-described pre-cancerous diseases, such as Barrett's esophagus and gastric intestinal metaplasia. This provides an opportunity for clinicians to detect these pre-cancerous conditions early and offer adequate cure or clinical monitoring before they progress to cancer. A camera test (gastroscopy) is the gold-standard test to detect pre-cancerous diseases in these organs. There has been limited research to set the standards for performance of a gastroscopy, especially with regards to diagnosis of pre-cancerous conditions, which require knowledge and skills by the physician performing the test (endoscopist). Therefore, the hypothesis behind this study is that the aforementioned pre-cancerous diseases are understudied and often go undetected. This study aims to understand how often endoscopists should diagnose these pre-cancerous diseases on routine gastroscopy and help define the standards to measure performance. The investigators will assess the following rates: i. how often endoscopists diagnose these pre-cancerous lesions during endoscopy; ii. How often these conditions are diagnosed on biopsies taken according to a standardized protocol; iii. How often these condition should have been diagnosed by the endoscopists based on the review of pictures by expert endoscopists. The investigators will also compare the rates of correct diagnosis by endoscopists with different levels of experience and based on the times spent to complete the diagnostic test. Investigating these aspects will enhance the understanding of the medical community with regards to the diagnosis of these pre-cancerous lesions and set endoscopy standards to improve their early detection and treatment before they progress to cancer. This will translate to improved cancer prevention and benefit for patients.
The purpose of the Dielectrics Properties of Thoracic Malignancies Study (DPTMS) is to provide a wealth of knowledge for investigators involved in establishing a new and effective treatment for a variety of solid tumors using tumor treatment fields. It is intended to provide biospecimen (tumor/healthy) together with demographic data (age, sex, race, occupational history, and other epidemiologic information), and clinical data (stage, treatment, survival information, and annotated CT's). Our specific aims are to test the following hypotheses: 1) Electric properties of thoracic tumors differ from electric properties of surrounding healthy tissue 2) Different tumor types will have different electric properties 3) Electric properties of individual tumors are heterogeneous 4) Electric properties of tumors are related to the structure and composition of the underlying tissue 5) Use of standard medical imaging data (CT) will permit mapping of electric properties.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Camrelizumab or Camrelizumab plus chemotherapy in patients with untreated, advanced ESCC with PD-L1 CPS≥10 ,who have been achieved PR and CR after treated with Camrelizumab.
The trial is a multi-center, open, observational registration study, which aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Camrelizumab (anti-PD-1 antibody) in the treatment of Chinese patients with advanced esophageal cancer in the real world.
This study is a randomized, multi-center, open-label, phase II study of a PD-1 inhibitor (INCMGA00012) versus observation as consolidation therapy after definitive concurrent chemoradiotherapy in patients with locally advanced ESCC who have not progressed following definitive chemoradiotherapy.
The aim of this study is to investigate if the systematic implementation of pre-emptive geno- and phenotyping, and therefore a dose reduction based on the French guidelines and the literature during the first month of treatment, reduces grade 3 or greater toxicity in patients treated with 5-FU (5-fluorouracil) or capecitabine. Therefore, a monocentric, partial prospective and partial retrospective trail was designed.