View clinical trials related to Liver Cancer.
Filter by:Due to the HBV and HCV infection, about 55% hepatocellular carcinoma patients happened in China. Among them, only 10% patients can be diagnosed in early stage. Sorafenib increased PFS and OS in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma patients with liver function of Child-Pugh class A patients, but the result for Child-Pugh class B patients is unclear.
Background: - Ablation is a procedure that heats tumor tissue to a high temperature to destroy it. Doctors perform this procedure by putting a probe in the tumor. This delivers heat to the site. Currently, doctors tell what area is heated by using the probe s manufacturer estimates. These estimates are imprecise. Doctors insert small needles to measure the temperature around the area being heated. Doctors also perform scans of the area, but these cannot show which tissue has been heated and which has not. Right now, only contrast scans can show that. But researchers have developed software that uses images from routine scans to create a temperature map. They want to test the software to see if doctors can monitor the procedure without using more needles and without contrast scans. Objectives: - To test software that might help doctors perform ablations better in the future. Eligibility: - People over 18 years of age already scheduled to have an ablation. Design: - Participants will be screened with a medical history. - Participants will visit the clinic for their already-scheduled ablation. The doctor will use the study software to analyze the temperature in the area being heated. The software will not come into contact with a participant s body. - Participants will undergo scans that are necessary for the procedure, but one or two additional scans may be done as part of this study.
The study comprises a Phase I component during which the optimal dose of DCVax-Direct for the treatment of solid tissue tumors will be identified, followed by a Phase II component to determine if the injection of DCVax-Direct into selected solid tissue tumors has the ability to reduce tumor growth.
The purpose of this study is to determine the whether Lipiodol can be used as an imaging biomarker, predicting tumor response to therapy in patients with primary and metastatic liver cancer. Lipiodol-based transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) has been an accepted standard of care procedure for unresectable liver lesions for several decades. Lipiodol is used as a carrier for chemotherapy agents and also as an occlusion agent. In TACE procedures, Lipiodol is mixed with the chemotherapy agent(s) and delivered to the tumor via the hepatic artery, causing necrosis of the targeted tumor(s). Response to therapy will be evaluated every 1, 3 and 6 months by clinic visits, MRI/CT/PET scans and blood tests (to include assessment of liver function and tumor markers).
The goal of this clinical research study is to find the highest tolerable dose of the combination of everolimus with TheraSphere that can be given to patients with advanced NETs that have spread to the liver. The safety of everolimus and TheraSphere will also be studied. Everolimus is designed to block a protein inside the cancer cells, which is also involved in cancer growth. TheraSphere is a medical device containing a radioactive material called yttrium-90 (Y-90). Tiny glass beads called microspheres are filled with Y-90 and then injected through an artery directly into the liver. This allows a large dose of radiation to be given directly to the tumor, which may lower the risk of side effects from the radiation to other parts of the body and/or to healthy liver tissue. The radiation from TheraSphere stays in the body and begins to lose its effect within 12 days. The glass microspheres will stay in the body from that point on. The radiation will eventually decay (go away). By the time a participant leaves the hospital, the amount of radiation outside of the body will be low enough to not be a threat to others.
Background: Pilot study to assess feasibility for combining treatment modalities that should be synergistic (radiation and thermal ablation). Thermal ablation with Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) and microwave ablation (MWA) are standard treatments for focal neoplasms in the liver. High volume or scattered locations of tumor burden results in inability to successfully use this technology for a large proportion of patients with hepatic neoplasms. Methods to enhance treatment volumes could be advantageous in potentially increasing the indications for thermal ablation or the number of patients benefitting from local ablation. Primary objective: To determine the safety of combining 2 standard therapies (thermal ablation and external beam radiation therapy) for liver neoplasms up to 10 cm diameter. Eligibility: Patients greater than 18 years of age with pathologically proven unresectable primary or metastatic hepatic neoplasms Patients whose extent of hepatic metastases represents approximately less than 60% of total liver volume AND whose extrahepatic metastatic disease is determined to be minimal ECOG performance status of less than or equal to 2 and a life expectancy of more than 3 months Patients with a history of chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or biological therapy for at least 4 weeks prior to starting study treatments, and 4 weeks after treatments Patients must not have an acute, critical illness If clinical or imaging evidence for cirrhosis present, then Bilirubin must be less than 3 mg/dl and Child-Pugh Classification A, (Class B & C are excluded) Design: Patients will undergo external beam radiation as well as thermal ablation according to standard operating procedures of the NCI and NIH CC. Patients will be monitored using the standard imaging studies when clinically warranted. Patients may be treated with a second (or more) thermal ablation procedure ALONE if it is deemed beneficial for the patient by the investigator. The sample size will be 10 evaluable patients
Background: - Tremelimumab is a cancer treatment drug that helps the immune system recognize and destroy cancer cells. Researchers want to see if it can be used to treat advanced liver cancer. The drug will be given with one of two types of treatment for liver cancer. The first type, transarterial catheter chemoembolization (TACE), injects chemotherapy drugs into the tumor through the main blood vessel that is feeding it. That blood vessel is then closed off to help keep the drugs in the tumor longer. The second type, radiofrequency ablation (RFA), uses a heated probe to destroy the tumor tissue. Researchers want to study how safe and effective these treatments are with the study drug. Objectives: - To test the safety and effectiveness of Tremelimumab with TACE or RFA for advanced liver cancer. Eligibility: - Individuals at least 18 years of age who have advanced liver cancer that has not responded to other treatments.
In order to perform research smoothly, the process of information extraction is required for translating data in clinical text into available format for analysis and statistic. In medical research, the problem of missing data occurs frequently. It is important to develop the method with better imputation performance in the stability and accuracy. The purposes of this project are to provide the data integration and extraction methods for handling the structured and unstructured data sources in more efficient ways, to provide the validation scheme for facilitating the data reviewing of extracted results produced by information extraction modules, to increase the quality of clinical data by comparing the data from different data sources and correcting data errors and inconsistent, to handle the clinical data with the properties of time series and incompleteness, to increase accuracy of data analysis and increase quality of health care by improving the completeness and correctness of clinical data, to provide flexibility of methods in the platform. In the project, the disease topic is focused on the liver cancer patients' clinical data and we hope the methods in the projects can be extended to handle other diseases by replacing these knowledge models in the future.
The purpose of this study is to draw blood from vessels near the liver in patients undergoing liver surgery. This will be performed in both patients with cancer in order to learn more about circulating tumor cells, proteins and DNA mutations in the blood. The blood in patients with colorectal cancer with liver metastases will be compared to blood taken from patients that do not have cancer that do not have cancer. Inclusion of patients with benign pathology will allow for the establishment of "normal" values which currently do not exist. We will then study whether tumor mutations can be used to predict recurrence and survival patterns.
Number of shows: 20 patients Track: A month with three visiting Intervention: Nutritional assessment including anthropometry, bioelectrical impedance, biochemical tests, Psychometric Hepatic Encephalopathy Score and Critical Flicker Frequency.