View clinical trials related to Liver Cancer.
Filter by:All patients who met the inclusion criteria were randomly divided into four groups, 30 cases in each group, which were lidocaine group 1, lidocaine group 1.5, lidocaine group 2, and the placebo group In lidocaine group 1, lidocaine group 1.5, and lidocaine group 2, 1% lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg was intravenously infused with a micropump after anesthesia induction, and the infusion was completed within 10 minutes according to the ideal body weight, and then continued for 1% lidocaine was infused at 1 mg/kg.h, 1.5 mg/kg.h and 2 mg/kg.h respectively until the end of the operation. In the placebo group, the same volume of normal saline was used instead.
The investigators hypothesize that the addition of Tislelizumab after definitive local therapy for locally advanced inoperable Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) will synergize with local therapy as well as treat micro metastatic disease and improve one year progression-free survival rates for participants and optimize local control.
Due to different etiologies, diagnosis and treatment of HCC in China is different from that in Western countries.US is an important screening method for HCC in patients with liver cirrhosis. CEUS, as an enhanced imaging method based on US, has the advantages of convenience, non-radiation, low cost, short examination time, and the diagnostic performance of HCC is comparable to that of CECT, CEMRI, and hepatobiliary-specific MRI. It is of great significance to consider the cost-effectiveness of each examination based on the principle of cost minimization. Therefore, we propose immediate CEUS examination for suspicious lesions ≤2 cm screened by US, and determine the diagnostic process of further diagnostic methods based on the CEUS results. The aim of this study is to establish a screening and diagnosis process for HCC ≤2 cm suitable for China considering time effect, economic effect and diagnostic efficiency.
This study has two purposes. One is to conduct a phase IV biomarker validation study in which the investigators will prospectively survey a cohort of patients at risk for liver cancer using semi-annual abdominal ultrasound and GALAD Score for 5 years. The GALAD score is a serum biomarker-based panel that can aid in early detection among patients with a high risk for liver cancer. One is to establish a bio-repository of longitudinally collected bio-specimens from patients with fibrosis/cirrhosis as a reference set for future research.
NEXPREM is a single-center non-blinded randomized controlled trial investigating preoperative exercise and nutrition for sarcopenic patients in major hepatic surgery for liver malignancies. Patients with sarcopenia undergoing major hepatectomies have high rates of postoperative complications. Previous studies have demonstrated that preoperative rehabilitation with exercise and nutrition may help reduce the negative impact of sarcopenia. The investigator's hypothesis is that preoperative nutrition and exercise may reduce complications in sarcopenic patients undergoing major hepatectomies. Sarcopenic patients at diagnosis will be randomized in Group A undergoing upfront surgery and Group B undergoing preoperative rehabilitation. Outcome will be overall 90 day morbidity.
The objective of this study is the acquisition of whole blood samples and serum samples from participants with untreated Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) and subjects undergoing Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) surveillance. These samples will be used for research purposes to develop and validate the Helio multi-analyte blood test.
This trial is an investigator-initiated, single-center, open-label, single-arm exploratory study of mRNA neoantigen tumor vaccine in the treatment of advanced gastric cancer, esophageal cancer, and liver cancer, including two phases: dose escalation and dose expansion. To evaluate the safety and tolerability of neoantigen tumor vaccine in subjects with advanced gastric cancer, esophageal cancer and liver cancer by conducting dose escalation trial in subjects diagnosed with advanced gastric cancer, esophageal cancer and liver cancer, and preliminarily evaluate the efficacy of neoantigen tumor vaccine in subjects with advanced gastric cancer, esophageal cancer and liver cancer. According to the characteristics of safety and efficacy data in the dose escalation phase, the dose expansion is performed at the intended clinical dose based on the investigator's judgment, and the treatment is performed in combination with PD-1/L1 to further evaluate the efficacy and safety profile of neoantigen tumor vaccine at a specific dose. Both the dose escalation phase and dose expansion phase include a screening period (Week -4 ~ Week -2), a baseline period (Week -1 ~ Day -1), a treatment period (Day 1 ~ Week 8 or 16), and a follow-up period. Subjects who signed and provided the formal informed consent entered the screening period. The treatment period included the initial treatment period (Day 1 ~ Week 8) and the enhanced treatment period (Week 12 ~ Week 16). The investigator determined whether to enter the enhanced treatment period based on the comprehensive judgment of the subject's efficacy, safety, compliance and other factors from Week 8 to Week 12. The dose escalation phase follows standard 3+3 design. 12-18 subjects are expected to be enrolled at 3 given dose level. The investigator will choose the optimal clinical dose for dose expansion, which can be one dose group or multiple dose groups. PD-1/L1 drugs are used in parallel to further confirm the efficacy and safety of neoantigen tumor vaccine, with about 18 subjects. The usage and dosage of PD-1/L1 should aligned with the package insert.
This trial is designed to investigate the safety, response rates and survival outcomes of patients with advanced solid tumors by infusion of CTLA4, PD1 and PDL1 antibodies combination through venous (IV), artery (IA) or intra-tumor (IT).
The of this study is to explore the clinical outcomes of indocyanine green molecular fluorescence imaging in local resection of primary hepatocellular carcinoma (CNLC Ⅰa stage).
This is a randomized double blinded placebo-controlled study, conducted in Lund, Sweden. Patients will be randomized in two groups, with a ratio of 1:1. The experimental arm will receive intravenous Lidocaine perioperatively, and the Control arm will receive placebo, i.e. normal Saline. Postoperative both arms will get routine pain Control with PCA, Patient Controlled Analgesia with an intravenous Oxycodone-infusion. Outcome-measures will include patients pain intensity scoring, and opioid consumption.