View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Hepatocellular.
Filter by:The "no-touch" technique has been one of the most important principles of oncological surgery and aimed to prevent seeding and tumor cell dissemination. Previous studies in hepatectomy have shown that no-touch technique surgery can reduce HCC recurrence and improve the survival of patients. However, there is no consensus on whether the no-touch technique in LT for HCC improves the outcomes. This study aims to prospectively include liver transplant patients from multiple transplant centers, collecting their pre-transplant clinical information, post-transplant pathological records and exploring and clarify the correlation between "no-touch" technique and the prognosis of LT patients.
As key biomarkers in HCC, AFP and PIVKA-II reflects biological features of tumor and has been widely applied for clinical diagnosis. Previous studies reported preoperative AFP and PIVKA-II are related to HCC recipient long-term survival after liver transplantation. However, there is no prospective study supporting these conclusions. This study aims to prospective collect liver transplantation cases from multiple transplant centers and further evaluate the prognostic role of preoperative AFP and PIVKA-II in liver transplantation for HCC.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most prominent kind of liver cancer, accounting for 85% of primary liver malignancies. It is a very aggressive tumor, having a terrible prognosis and poor survival rate HCC is ranked as the sixth most common type of cancer and the third leading cause of cancer-related mortalities world wide. HCC incidences arise in complications associated with chronic liver disease like cirrhosis, endemic hepatitis B virus (HBV)/hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, non alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and alcohol-related liver disease (Torre, 2015).
The challenge of LDLT to HCC is that tumors with a high risk of recurrence have a high rate of recurrence after liver transplantation, and there is no appropriate treatment to prevent HCC recurrence after transplantation in these patients. Using the advance proton therapy or yttrium 90 as a more aggressive down-staging therapy may contribute to change tumor behavior. It can be used to get a better treatment response and tumor necrosis before LDLT. As a result, it will improve recurrence-free survival and overall survival rate, especially in high-risk groups. In addition, lenvatinib is approved for using in patients with advanced liver cancer because its overall survival rate is not less than sorafenib in clinical trials. A new generation of targeted therapies will be applied to adjuvant therapy after LDLT.
ETN101 is a multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitor (mTKI) targeting fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3), receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2), and platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta. Both in vitro and in vivo studies showed that ETN101 treatment/administration inhibited cancer cell survival and proliferation. In animal models, ETN101 had antitumor activity when administered to animals that did not respond to conventional targeted anticancer agents.
This cohort study aims to evaluate the validation of general evaluation score in the prediction of hepatocellular carcinoma risk among patients with advanced fibrosis (F3) and cirrhosis (F4) who achieved sustained virological response for hepatitis c virus after direct acting antiviral drugs and determine the group of these patients who require intensified surveillance.
Atezolizumab + Bevacizumab was superior to sorafenib in overall survival in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. The programmed cell death protein-1 (PD1) and PDL1 inhibitor, was effective and tolerable in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. We aimed to describe the efficacy and safety of locoregional therapy combined with Bevacizumab and PD1/L1 inhibitor in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma who can not receive radical therapy.
TQB2223 is a recombinant, fully human antibody that binds to lymphocyte activation gene-3 (LAG-3) and blocks the LAG-3/ major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) interaction, thus allowing for increased T-cell proliferation and cytokine production. This is a phase Ib study aimed at evaluating the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity characteristics of TQB2223 injection combined with AK105 injection in the treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.
On the basis of previous retrospective studies, the Task Force will further optimize the CTCs longitudinal surveillance model and initially validate the subclonal origin (CTC-DNA) of recurrent/metastatic foci derived from CTCs at the molecular level in hepatocellular carcinoma, prospective clinical trials will be conducted to further validate the predictive value of the CTCS longitudinal monitoring model in predicting postoperative recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma, and to verify whether it is earlier than imaging to indicate recurrence, to explore the clinical feasibility of CTCs in guiding postoperative adjuvant therapy of liver cancer, and to provide new ideas for early intervention strategy of liver cancer after operation, to establish a set of standardized clinical scheme of auxiliary treatment for patients with liver cancer after operation for accurate and individualized"Early diagnosis and treatment".
This study aims to assess the effectiveness and safety of lenvatinib plus Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM) for patients with uHCC in China.