View clinical trials related to Stomach Neoplasms.
Filter by:This parallel, randomized, open-label study will evaluate the effect on overall survival of irinotecan on oxaliplatin and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in patients with HER2-negative and pMMR metastatic gastric cancer. Irinotecan will be administered as intravenous infusion of 150 mg/m2 every 2 weeks. Oxaliplatin will be given 85 mg/m2 and 5-FU will be given 400mg/m2 iv and 2400mg/m2 civ 48 hours fortnightly. Treatment will continue until disease progress or untolerable toxicity appears. The target sample size is 350-400 patients.
For second-line chemotherapy for metastatic gastric cancer, single-agent irinotecan is the standard treatment. Anthracyclines are active but lack well designed investigations. The combination of epirubicin, fluorouracil and cisplatin (or oxaliplatin) are widely used in Europe. However, traditional anthracyclines are more cardiotoxic; and (Pegliposomal Doxorubicin) PLD, as a new liposome dosage form of doxorubicin, has better cardiac safety. Therefore, we designed this phase II trial with PLD and 5-Fu to compare irinotecan monotherapy in the second-line treatment.
Gastric cancer is one of the most common malignant tumors of the digestive tract. Gastric cancer patients diagnosed for the first time in China have a higher proportion of advanced stages and a higher postoperative metastasis rate. Studies have shown that patients with good pathological response after preoperative neoadjuvant therapy (such as tumor regression grade, TRG0 or 1) have a better prognosis. The AIO-FLOT4 study found that preoperative perioperative FLOT chemotherapy not only prolonged the progression-free survival (PFS) time and overall survival (OS) time of patients with advanced gastric cancer, but also increased postoperative pathological remission rate. How to further improve the efficacy of the perioperative treatment plan may be beneficial to improve the long-term survival of gastric cancer patients. Several clinical studies have also confirmed that PD-1 antibody significantly prolongs the life of gastric cancer patients who have failed advanced chemotherapy in the back-line treatment. Thus the investigators plan to conduct this clinical trials to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Toripalimab (PD-1 antibody) combined with FLOT regimen in the perioperative period.The secondary end points included pathological remission rate, resection rate, D2 radical resection rate, 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) rate and 5-year OS rate.
Background. Peritoneal carcinomatosis is a frequent and deadly localization of gastric cancer. Available imaging techniques have a low accuracy in detecting small peritoneal nodules, and direct laparoscopic visualization may fail too. A more accurate staging technique would be advantageous for individualization of therapeutic path. Indocyanine Green (ICG) fluorescence imaging has been reported as a tool for visualizing small peritoneal seedings due to the "enhanced permeability and retention" (EPR) effect of cancer nodules. Aim. To explore the feasibility and effectiveness of fluorescence-enhanced peritoneal carcinomatosis detection in patients with gastric cancer undergoing staging laparoscopy. Methods. This prospective, multicentric, single arm study will include patients with gastric cancer, without a radiological suspicion of peritoneal carcinomatosis, undergoing staging laparoscopy. An intravenous injection of ICG is given at different dosage and at different timepoints before the intervention. During the staging laparoscopy, the abdominal cavity exploration is performed using standard white-light, and subsequently using fluorescence imaging. Suspicious nodules are harvested, until a maximum of 5 per patient, and sent for definitive histological examination. Peritoneal washing is also harvested for cytologic assessment in all cases. The eventual benefit of fluorescence imaging in terms of additional peritoneal lesions that were not detected during standard white-light imaging is evaluated. Discussion. This study will establish if fluorescence imaging increases sensitivity and/or specificity of staging laparoscopy in detecting peritoneal carcinomatosis from gastric cancer. Improved accuracy may translate in better care path selection.
This study was a prospective, randomized, controlled phase III clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of docetaxel plus oxaliplatin and capecitabine versus oxaliplatin plus capecitabine in the treatment of gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma with postoperative pathological stage IIIB and IIIC.
To compare the short-term surgical safety and postoperative quality of life of totally laparoscopic versus laparoscopy-assisted total gastrectomy and to evaluate the superiority of totally laparoscopic total gastrectomy.
This is a single arm study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CEA-targeted CAR-T cells therapy for patients with relapsed/refractory CEA+ Cancer,and obtain the recommended dose and infusion plan.
This is a prospective, single-center, single-arm, open-label clinical study, aiming at evaluating the efficacy and safety of camrelizumab for injection, apatinib mesylate and tegio for first-line refractory patients with advanced gastric cancer.
The efficacy of HIPEC in prevention of local recurrence, distant metastasis or peritoneal metastasis in locally advanced gastric cancer is not definite. The hypothesis of the trial is that radical gastrectomy combined with HIPEC is superior to only radical gastrectomy in terms of overall survival.
This is a study for participants with advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma who have had tumor progression after first-line platinum-contained therapy. The primary study hypotheses are that camrelizumab (SHR-1210) combined with apatinib prolongs overall survival (OS) for participants with tumors that show positive programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression.