View clinical trials related to Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
Filter by:This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of donafenib combined with sintilimab in patients with advanced hepatocellullar carcinoma (HCC).
The investigators design a phase IIB clinical study to explore the efficacy and safety of Donafenib combined with TACE as adjuvant therapy of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma at a high risk of recurrence after radical resection.
This phase II trial tests whether Y-90 segmentectomy (internal radiation) versus stereotactic body radiation therapy (external radiation) is more optimal in treating inoperable liver cancer. Y-90 segmentectomy consists into very tiny radioactive glass beads that can be injected into the liver through the blood vessels supplying the liver. Stereotactic body radiation therapy uses special equipment to position a patient and deliver external radiation to tumors with high precision. This study many help doctors determine which treatment, Y-90 segmentectomy or SBRT, works better in treating liver cancer.
A study that aimed to assess the safety and anti-tumor activity of CCAR031 injection in unresectable HCC patients.
Clinical research of Yang Yin Fu Zheng Jie Du therapy in HBV associated Hepatocellular Carcinoma based on the platelet count/splenic length-diameter ratio.The purpose of this study is to establish the efficacy evaluation system combined with platelet/splenic length-diameter ratio, and to clarify the effect of this method on relieving hepatitis B cirrhosis and delaying the progression of Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
The treatment of HBV related hepatocellular carcinoma has always been a worldwide problem. The aim of this study is to alleviate the progression of hepatitis B related hepatocellular carcinoma by the Chinese medicine "Fu Zheng Jie Du Hua Yu" Principle.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the 4th most common cause of cancer death globally but only 20% are diagnosed in its early stages where curative treatment can be carried out. Current standard-of-care surveillance of patients at high risk of developing HCC with 6-monthly serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and ultrasound imaging (US) has a sensitivity of approximately 63% for detecting early HCC. There is an urgent need for a more efficacious and convenient modality of surveillance of high-risk patients to diagnose HCC at an early stage. In another study (AHCC10 ELEGANCE, NCT04965259), 2,000 patients at risk of developing HCC will be enrolled to develop the 1st miRNA in-vitro diagnostic (IVD) kit for HCC that has higher accuracy and better ease of use compared with the extant combination of AFP and US. This prospective study will act as a positive control to the AHCC10 ELEGANCE Study and aims to address the absence of efficacious modalities of surveillance by validating a panel of circulating miRNA biomarkers signatures with histologically proven HCC. This study will determine progressive changes in the profiles of miRNA signatures pre- and post- surgical resection to identify signatures predictive of recurrence. Additionally, this study also aims to identify changes in key metabolites and microbiome with correlation to changes in choline, bile acid and tryptophan metabolic pathways with changes in the composition and function of gut microbiota to establish actionable biomarkers that can predict HCC recurrence.
This study evaluates a concept called 'Teaching the Teachers' and whether it is helpful in disseminating guidelines on the national and international levels. "Teaching the Teachers" involves teaching the guidelines to experts who later teach the same guidelines to other radiologists, trainees, and physicians to assume the teacher's role and disseminate the guidelines and so on.
A multicentre, parallel group, randomized controlled Phase II clinical trial evaluating neoadjuvant Atezolizumab/Bevacizumab versus neoadjuvant SBRT in patients with biopsy proven solitary HCC with PVTT involving the portal vein branches. Both arms are considered experimental, and as such, a Simon two-stage design will be initially used within both arms. Only if both arms are deemed of interest for further study will a comparison between arms, using a pick-the-winner design, be conducted. Following the completion of neoadjuvant therapy, study participants will undergo a CT scan or MRI to assess tumour response to neoadjuvant therapy. Hepatic resection will be performed for those participants who meet the surgical resection criteria.
To investigate efficacy and toxicity of regorafenib after treatment with atezolizumab and bevacizumab combination