View clinical trials related to Stomach Neoplasms.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine the dose limiting toxicity and the maximum tolerable dose of the radiochemotherapy with Docetaxel and Oxaliplatin in patients with adenocarcinoma of the gastric-oesophageal junction.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of 2 different sequences of polychemotherapy among carrying patients of a adenocarcinoma of the stomach or cardia locally advanced or metastatic.
RATIONALE: Stop-smoking plans, including counseling and nicotine replacement therapy, may help smokers quit smoking. It is not yet known whether counseling and the nicotine lozenge is more effective than counseling and the nicotine patch in helping adult smokers quit smoking. PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is studying counseling and the nicotine lozenge to see how well they work compared to counseling and the nicotine patch in helping smokers quit smoking.
The purpose of this study is to learn if vinflunine can shrink or slow the growth of cancer in patients with advanced or metastatic stomach cancer who have progressed on a prior treatment with a fluoropyrimidine or taxane-containing chemotherapy regimen. The safety of this treatment will also be studied.
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as capecitabine and oxaliplatin, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Giving more than one drug (combination chemotherapy) may kill more tumor cells. PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well giving capecitabine together with oxaliplatin works in treating patients with locally advanced, unresectable, or metastatic stomach cancer.
Investigation of the outcome of an adjuvant treatment with catumaxomab as compared to surgery alone in patients after curative resection of a gastric adenocarcinoma in order to gain more detailed information primary on safety, tolerability and feasibility and secondary on relevant efficacy parameters.
The primary goal of this phase II trial is to evaluate the response rate of combination chemotherapy with S-1 and Irinotecan in patients with advanced gastric cancer as a first-line therapy.
Study objectives: To determine Ro resection rate of Docetaxel, cisplatin and fluorouracil combination for the treatment of neoadjuvant gastric carcinoma.
A prospective cohort study is proposed to evaluate occupational and environmental risk factors for cancer among women in Shanghai, China. Approximately 75,000 women aged 40-69 who reside in eight geographically defined communities in two urban districts of Shanghai will be recruited via a community-based cancer education program. All eligible subjects will be invited by local health workers from the neighborhood health station to the clinic for an interview and selected anthropometric measurements. The interview will elicit information on demographic background, diet, lifestyle factors, medical history, lifetime occupational history and residential history for the past 20 years. In addition, the women will be asked for information on their husbands' current and usual occupations, and demographic and a few other exposure factors. A spot urine sample and 10 ml of blood will be collected from all cohort members and stored at -70 degrees C for future assays of urine metabolites and DNA and hemoglobin adducts of selected occupational and environmental carcinogens, and polymorphic genes encoding enzymes that are involved in metabolism of relevant carcinogens. Cohort members and their husbands will be followed for cancer outcomes through biennial recontact and linkage with files of the population-based Shanghai Cancer Registry, of the Shanghai Vital Statistics, and of the Shanghai Resident Registry. Medical records and pathology slides will be reviewed for all cancer cases to verify their diagnosis. Post-diagnostic blood samples will be obtained from all cohort members diagnosed with cancer during the follow-up period and stored for future methodologic and etiologic studies. The proposed initial study period is 5 years, with an average follow-up of about 3.5 years. We anticipate, however, that follow-up will continue for 10 years or more.
Esophageal cancer is a common malignancy with a very poor prognosis. The principal reason for its poor prognosis is that most tumors are asymptomatic and go undetected until they have spread beyond the esophageal wall and are unresectable. Significant reduction in esophageal cancer mortality will require successful strategies to diagnose and treat more cases at earlier, more curable stages of disease. A successful early detection program will require an accurate, patient-acceptable screening test, confirmatory tests that can localize precursor and early invasive lesions, and one or more curative therapies that are acceptable to asymptomatic patients. This project includes five studies designed to evaluate techniques that may be useful in such an early detection program: 1. The Cytology Sampling Study will estimate and compare the sensitivity of several cytologic samplers for identifying biopsy-proven dysplasia and cancer of the esophagus. 2. The Mucosal Staining Study will evaluate whether mucosal straining can improve endoscopic localization of esophageal dysplasia and cancer. 3. The Endoscopic Staging Study will evaluate how accurately endoscopic techniques can stage dysplasia and early invasive cancer of the esophagus. 4. The Endoscopic Therapy Pilot Study will evaluate the feasibility, safety, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of endoscopic therapies for removing or ablating focal high-grade dysplasias and early invasive cancers of the esphagus. 5. The Chemoregression Study will evaluate the ability of oral chemopreventive agents to reduce progression or cause regression of low-grade squamous dysplasia of the esophagus. This project will be carried out in Linxian, China, a county with extraordinary rates of esophageal cancer and a correspondingly high prevalence of the asymptomatic precursor and early invasive lesions that are needed for these studies. The project will be a collaborative effort of investigators from NCI, the Cancer Institute of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, and several U.S. universities.