View clinical trials related to Rectal Cancer.
Filter by:The primary objective of this research study is to explore the barriers encountered by specific demographic groups of rectal cancer patients during the engagement in clinical trials, which historically lack diverse representation. By carefully analyzing data from various demographic perspectives, this study aims to uncover patterns that impact the experiences of future rectal cancer patients. Active involvement in this crucial research is of utmost importance, as it can offer unique insights to enhance the participation and completion rates of rectal cancer patients in clinical study.
Colorectal cancer is the third leading cause of cancer death and the fourth most commonly diagnosed cancer in the world. The importance of improving the quality of life of patients after colorectal cancer surgery has been gradually emphasized as the survival period after treatment increases. Especially, patients who underwent rectal cancer surgery experience complex bowel movement abnormalities called 'lower anterior resection syndrome' such as urgency, tenesmus, frequent stool passing, which severely degrades the quality of life after surgery. To manage these symptoms, several treatment modalities including medication, neurostimulation, or biofeedback have been tried, but they are not fully effective. Therefore, we designed this clinical trial to examine the effects of dietary supplementation of the fruit, 'Prune', on improving bowel function after anterior resection rectal cancer surgery. Prune is a dried fruit made from American plums with no seeds, and popular in the worldwide for its sweet and sour flavor and texture. In particular, the high content of sorbitol and dietary fiber softens the stool and improves the overall intestinal function, showing an excellent effect on alleviating constipation symptoms, which has been well studied in several clinical trials. This study is going to be performed on patients under the age of 65 with primary rectal cancer and rectosigmoid colon cancer who underwent low anterior resection (LAR) exclusive of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Patients who are treated preoperatively with metallic stent insertion will be excluded. Those who have fruit allergy, diabetes, or chronic constipation will also be excluded. Subjects will be randomly assigned to treatment (Prune) or control group (No-prune) immediately after the surgery. Subjects who are assigned to the treatment group consume a total of 100 g of prune per day and the subjects assigned to the control group are allowed to have a normal meal without prune for 18 days. All subjects should fulfill the LAR syndrome questionnaire, The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality of life questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-c30), and the defecation habit questionnaire on the day before the surgery and the postoperative day 21. And the subjects also fulfill the defecation diary till the postoperative day 21. The primary endpoint is the incidence of LAR syndrome. The secondary endpoint was the score of EORTC QLQ-C30, defecation habit questionnaire. Prune intake is less costly than conventional medical treatments for improving bowel function, and it is expected to show high compliance for patients due to the ease of application. Furthermore, if this study demonstrates that prune intake improves the symptoms of LAR syndrome and quality of life after rectal cancer surgery, the ingredients and components of prune could be used to develop new drugs for alleviating the symptoms of LAR syndrome.
Diarrhea was the most frequently reported severe adverse event in the treatment regime of pre-operative sequential short-course radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy (so called total neo-adjuvant treatment). This study therefore investigates the benefit of on-couch adaptation for locally advanced rectal cancer patients undergoing this treatment regime.
Compared with traditional manual suturing, mechanical anastomosis can reduce the error caused by human factors. The electric anastomotic device can improve the automation and accuracy of anastomosis, reduce the requirements for doctors' operation, and establish a more standardized usage specification, thereby reducing the surgical complication rate and improving the quality of anastomosis. The clinical study of electric tubular anastomotic device adopts a multicenter, randomized, parallel controlled non-inferior study design, and randomly groups according to the 1:1 ratio to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and safety of electric tubular anastomotic device compared with conventional manual device.
This is a single arm, open-label, prospective clinical trial to evaluate the combination of neoadjuvant short-course radiotherapy and toripalimab (PD-1 antibody) for locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) patients with high risk factors. A total of 53patients will be enrolled in this trial to receive 5*5Gy short-course radiotherapy, followed by 4 cycles of CAPOX chemotherapy and PD-1 antibody. Then they will receive the TME surgery and another 2 cycles of CAPOX chemotherapy. The primary end point is the rate of pathological complete response (pCR). The long-term prognosis and adverse effects will also be evaluated and analyzed.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the T1 relaxation time and T1 relaxation time properties of the disease in people with locally advanced rectal cancer. The main question it aims to answer is: Does MRI T1 relaxation time have a high diagnostic performance in recognizing fibrosis as a complete response to neoadjuvant treatment of rectal cancer? Participants will receive standard neoadjuvant treatment and be part of the standard examination programme regarding rectal cancer.
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the number of harvested locoregional lymph nodes in rectal cancer patients undergoing laparoscopic total mesorectal excision and indocyanine green (ICG)-guided lymphoadenectomy after neoadjuvant chemoradiation. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does the use of ICG increase the total number of harvested lymph nodes? - Does the use of ICG increase the number of harvested extra-mesorectal lymph nodes? Participants will intraoperatively receive a trans-anal administration of ICG near to rectal cancer; during laparoscopic surgery, ICG-fluorescent nodes beyond the mesorectum will be separately excised and sent for pathology. A comparison will be performed with a recent cohort of patients affected by rectal cancer treated with standard surgery without the use of ICG.
This clinical trial aims to evaluate the safety and feasibility of mid-line fascial suturing using MONOFIX sutures in patients undergoing minimally invasive surgery for colorectal cancer.
A Single-arm phase II trial evaluating induction chemotherapy with FOLFIRINOXm followed by short course radiotherapy (RT) in locally advanced rectal carcinoma
Short-course radiotherapy combined with immunotherapy may bring revolutionary changes to the total neoadjuvant therapy mode for locally advanced ultra low rectal cancer to preserve the organs. In view of the shortcomings of the current otal neoadjuvant therapy model for locally advanced ultra low rectal cancer, we will explore the feasibility of a new model of short-course radiotherapy combined with immunotherapy, and develop a possible optimal plan based on the existing theoretical basis, namely "short-course radiotherapy + PD-L1 monoclonal antibody combined with CAPEOX chemotherapy for 8 cycles", and explore the efficacy and adverse effects of this model. The study will also attempt to explore the characteristics of the treatment beneficiary population, explore the characteristics of the treatment beneficiary population by multi-dimensional tumor and microenvironmental information through multi-omics sequencing analysis, attempt to build an efficacy prediction model, early screening of the treatment beneficiary population for precise treatment, and thus explore a new model of radiotherapy combined with immunotherapy for the poplation who can be achieved organ preservation.