View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Hepatocellular.
Filter by:The goal of this double-blind, randomized controlled trial is to test the effect of short-term and high-dose vitamin D therapy in patients undergoing hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma.
This Retrospective Real-world study was designed to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of the Combination of transarterial therapies with donafenib plus Anti-PD-1 Antibody for Unresectable Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
The aim is to determine the metabolic factors, host immune factors, and medical imaging data associated with the development of HepatoCellular Carcinoma (HCC) in patients with alcohol-related liver disease or dysmetabolic steatosis/Non-Alcoholic SteatoHepatitis. The investigators will include patients with and without cirrhosis in order to identify early molecular mechanisms involved in the development of HCC especially in non-cirrhotic patients.
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of HAIC or Lenvatinib combined with Sintilimab as a neoadjuvant therapy for high recurrence risk resectable stage IB solitary hepatocellular carcinoma
This project will clarify the potential interaction between HBV infection and steatosis, and their impact on genetic alterations and tumor immune microenvironment.
Non-intervention observation to evaluate the safety and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors alone or combined with molecular targeted drugs / local interventional therapy in patients with advanced liver cancer, and to provide the best choice for the treatment of patients with advanced liver cancer in different stages.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth prevalent malignancy worldwide. Although surgical excision is considered the standard treatment for resectable HCC, a high rate of postoperative recurrence was observed after partial hepatectomy, with a marginal recurrence rate up to 30%. Narrow margin resection may be the most appropriate procedure for centrally located HCC or HCC located near liver capsule because the premise for survival is the conservation of more normal liver parenchyma. Unfortunately, narrow margin resection has been reported to contribute to poor survival outcomes. However, no adjuvant therapy after hepatectomy is generally considered to be effective in reducing post-operative recurrence. Radiotherapy (RT) has been well used in many solid malignant tumors as an (neo)adjuvant to surgical treatment, including HCC. SBRT has shown encouraging rates of local control for HCC. Compared with standard fractionation radiation, SBRT can achieve more precise delivery of high-dose radiation beams to the lesion, obtaining a much smaller target volume. Meanwhile, it could be finished in a short period which can bring more convenience to patients. Recently, several study and randomized controlled trials revealed the survival benefit of adjuvant RT (IMRT and SBRT) in patients with HCC. A large-sample and high-quality multi-center, randomized controlled, prospective study is warranted to further confirm the efficacy of adjuvant radiotherapy in patients with narrow margin resection, considering the small sample size of above-mentioned studies.
TACE lays a theoretical foundation for synergistic enhancement in combination with PD-1/PD-L1 immunosuppressive agents by reducing tumor burden and peripheral blood treg, improving the immune status of patients, reducing immune tolerance, and enhancing anti-tumor effects. TACE then causes locally treated tumor cell death and releases tumor-specific antigens, which further induce tumor-associated antigen-specific responses due to this immunogenic cell death (ICD), thereby activating the immune system to attack tumor cells. This is a single-arm, open-label, exploratory clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Envafolimab, Lenvatinib combined with TACE in the treatment of unresectable locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.
Pilot study planned to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of the use of BioTraceIO 360 for Planning, Monitoring and Assessment of liver tissue ablation procedures Multi-center (up to 5 investigational sites) prospective single-arm clinical investigation. Sample size - 30 subjects.
This is a Phase 2, open-label, single-arm study of neoadjuvant immune-checkpoint blockade therapy (AK104) combining with TACE for resectable hepatocellular carcinoma. The purpose is to investigate the efficacy and safety of this therapeutic regimen to reduce the risk of postoperative recurrence in resectable HCC patients with a high risk of recurrence.