View clinical trials related to Gastric Cancer.
Filter by:This is a non-randomized multicenter phase 1b clinical trial of the safety and pharmacokinetics, as well as the preliminary efficacy of monotherapy with alofanib, an allosteric fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 inhibitor, in patients with advanced gastric cancer who have exhausted the resource of standard therapy.
Cohort 1 [CLOSED] Study treatment involves two segments: (1) Induction Immunotherapy segment with pembrolizumab monotherapy every 3 weeks until irRECIST PD and (2) Combination Therapy segment. Nab-paclitaxel may be utilized in place of paclitaxel at investigator's discretion for subjects with paclitaxel reactions. Cohort 2 Patients are randomized to Arm A or B. Treatment in both arms includes pembrolizumab + RAM + paclitaxel.
Study of NGM120 in subjects with advanced solid tumors and and pancreatic cancer (Part 1 and 2) and metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (Part 3).
Study to evaluate the safety of Nanoxel M inj. administration in patients.
Sintilimab in Combination With Capecitabine and Oxaliplatin (XELOX) as Neoadjuvant Therapy in patients With Resectable Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer
IMAGINE is a Phase II, randomized, two-arm, chemotherapy controlled modular trial in subjects with histologically confirmed, resectable gastric cancer (GC) or adenocarcinoma of the gastroesophageal junction (AEG). Up to 22 patients will be included in each arm of the trial.
This prospective, single arm phase II study is designed to evaluate the rate of pathologic complete response of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery for locally advanced gastric adenocarcinoma
In this study patients will be offered intraperitoneal atomized chemotherapy as a supplement to the standard treatment of high-risk gastric cancer (laparoscopic removal of the stomach). Two commercially available oncologic drugs will be used (doxorubicin and cisplatin).
Title: A single-center, retrospective randomized controlled trial of artificial intelligence (AI) versus expert endoscopists for diagnosis of gastric cancer in patients who underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Précis: this single-center, retrospective randomized controlled trial will include 500 outpatients who underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for gastric cancer screening and will compare the diagnostic detection rate for gastric cancer of AI and expert endoscopists. Objectives Primary Objective: to evaluate the diagnostic detection rate for gastric cancer of AI and expert endoscopists. Secondary Objectives: to determine whether AI is not inferior to expert endoscopists in terms of the number of images analyzed for diagnosis of gastric cancer and intersection over union (IOU), and the detection rate of diagnosis of early and advanced gastric cancer. Endpoints Primary Endpoint: diagnosis of gastric cancer. Secondary Endpoints: image based diagnosis of gastric cancer and IOU. Population: in total, 500 males and females aged ≥ 20 years who underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for screening of gastric cancer at a single hospital in Japan. Describe the Intervention: AI-based diagnosis of gastric cancer based on upper gastrointestinal endoscopy images. Study Duration: 3 months.
Background: Three-fourths of people diagnosed with gastric cancer will die from it. Researchers want to see if giving cancer drugs in a new way can help people live longer and delay the time it takes for the cancer to grow. Objective: To find a better way to treat advanced stomach cancer. Eligibility: People ages 18 and older with stomach cancer that has spread throughout their belly. Design: Participants will be screened with: Medical history Physical exam Blood, urine, and heart tests Scans Cancer sample: If they do not have one, they will have a biopsy. Tests of performance of normal activities Dietary assessment Participants will have a laparoscopy. Small cuts are made into their abdomen. A thin camera with a light is inserted. Small instruments are used to take biopsies. This will be repeated during the study to monitor the cancer. During the first laparoscopy, a port with a catheter attached will be put into the abdomen. Participants may also have an endoscopy: A thin tube with a camera is inserted through the mouth and into the stomach. The tube collects samples to monitor the cancer. Participants will get paclitaxel every 3 weeks through the abdominal port and through a small plastic tube in an arm vein. They will also take capecitabine by mouth twice daily for the first 15 days of a 21-day cycle. After participants finish 3 cycles, they will have scans to see how they are doing. They may get another course of therapy. Participants will have visits every 3 weeks during treatment. Then they will have follow-up visits for 5 years. Then they will keep in touch with researchers for the rest of their life.