View clinical trials related to Rectal Neoplasms.
Filter by:Patients with rectal cancer and resectable liver metastases receive short course radiotherapy(5Gy/f x 5f) to the pelvis and XELOX consolidating chemotherapy al least 4 cycles after 2 weeks.
The investigators propose to conduct a randomised study on cT2, cT3a-b tumours less than 5 cm using two different techniques of radiotherapy boost following neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) (CAP45): EBRT (9 Gy/5 fractions) or CXB (90 Gy/3 fractions). The endpoint will be organ preservation at 3 years without non-salvageable local pelvic recurrence. The proof of this concept will be of most benefit for all patients but especially for the elderly who usually are not fit for or keen to undergo major surgery. The hypothesis of this study is to determine whether the addition of an endocavitary boost with CXB after standard treatment with nCRT, increases the chance of rectum and anus preservation by 20%-unites in early rectal adenocarcinoma without locally progressive disease (organ preservation in control arm 20%, in experimental arm 40%). Main objective To demonstrate that neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in combination with a boost given with CXB (Arm B) is superior to the same neoadjuvant therapy plus a boost with EBRT alone (Arm A) in terms of rectum (organ) preservation without non salvageable local disease at 3 years post treatment start, or permanent deviating stoma. Study Design Open-label, phase III, prospective, multi-centre, international, randomised 1:1, 2 arm study designed to evaluate the efficacy of a CXB boost versus an EBRT boost.
A randomized trial comparing weather preoperative short-course radiotherapy with local boost is better than conventional preoperative short-course radiotherapy for local advanced rectal cancer.
The purpose of this study is evaluation of the safety and the efficacy of transanal local excision in patients with cT3 rectal cancer which was downstaged into ycT0-1 after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy.
A prospective study is planned for management of low rectal cancer with the aim of sphincter preservation and improving the oncological outcome of the patients, through comparing of both approaches minimally invasive techniques including transanal total mesorectal excision and laparoscopic intersphincteric resection.
Cases with stage T2 N0 low rectal cancer will undergo either Transanal minimally invasive total mesorectal excision or transanal minimally invasive locoregional resection.
This study tests biopsy and tissue from patients who have been treated for primary rectal cancer at the Royal Marsden Hospital between 2011 and 2013, who have an mrTRG score at post-chemoradiotherapy MRI. It is a retrospective pilot study to determine the apoptotic and proliferative index count pre and post chemoradiotherapy.
The investigators compare two-week course of chemoradiation (33 Gy in 10 fractions with oral capecitabine) and conventional chemoradiation (50.4 Gy in 28 fractions with 5-FU and leucovorin) in this randomized trial.
A phase II, randomized study of placebo versus metformin in association to chemotherapy with capecitabine and radiation in the neoadjuvant treatment of locally advanced (T3-4N0M0 or TxN1-2M0) rectal carcinomas.
Through a double blinded study, patients with low rectal cancer will be randomized into two equal groups to compare between the 5 year disease free survival as a primary outcome measure.