View clinical trials related to Carcinoma.
Filter by:Background: Neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are rare cancers in the gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, lungs, adrenal glands, and other areas of the body. Many of these cancers have a high risk of relapse and a low chance of survival. Better treatments are needed. Objective: To test a new drug, ADCT-701, in people with NENs. Eligibility: Adults aged 18 and older with NENs. Design: Participants will be screened. They will have a physical exam with blood and urine tests. They will have imaging scans and tests of heart functioning. Their ability to perform normal daily activities will be tested. A biopsy may be needed: A sample of tissue will be removed from the tumor. ADCT-701 is given through a tube attached to a needle inserted into a vein in the arm. Participants will receive the drug treatment on the first day of 21-day treatment cycles. They will visit the clinic a total of 10 times during the first two cycles. After that, they will visit the clinic 2 times during each cycle. Imaging scans, blood draws, heart function tests, and other tests will be repeated during study visits. Each visit will last up to 8 hours. Participants may continue receiving treatment with the study drug for up to 2 years. After treatment ends, participants will have follow-up clinic visits 4 times in 4 months. They will have a physical exam, with heart and blood tests, at each visit. After that, they will have follow-up clinic visits every 9 weeks; these visits will include imaging scans. Follow-up visits will continue for up to 5 years after treatment began....
This study is a single-arm, multicenter clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SBRT combined with cardonilizumab and lenvastinib in the treatment of unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma with portal vein tumor thrombus
The purpose of this study is to measure the efficacy and safety of durvalumab intravenous (IV) solution plus bevacizumab IV solution after transarterial radioembolization (Yttrium 90 glass microspheres TARE) in participants with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) amenable to embolization.
New algorithms for processing CT acquisitions, based on artificial intelligence, have been reported to improve acquisition quality. Thats' why it's possible to imagine that new scan post-processing algorithms enable better detection and characterization of hepatocellular carcinoma lesions than with standard reconstructions. DLIR reconstructions could even match with MRI detection. The aim of the study is to compare the detection and characterization of hepatic lesions according to the LI-RADS classification in CT with DLIR artificial intelligence reconstruction, compared with ASIR-V reconstruction and the gold standard of MRI.
This is a Phase II, open-label, single arm trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of AK104 in combination with lenvatinib in previous immunotherapy treated advanced/metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). Subjects with unresectable advanced clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) who were second line patients after first-line immunotherapy combined treatment progression. Subjects will receive Cadonilimab(AK104) plus lenvatinib until disease progression, development of unacceptable toxic effects, death, a decision by the physician or patient to withdraw from the trial. The primary endpoint is ORR per RECIST v1.1 as assessed by investigators.
To compare the clinical outcomes of Lenvatinib treatment alone or Lenvatinib + ADI-PEG20 combination treatment in advanced HCC patients with BCLC stage C.
This is a Phase 1, open-label, dose escalation and expansion study of MT-8421 (an Engineered Toxin Body (ETB)) as monotherapy and in combination with nivolumab in patients with selected advanced solid cancer types. MT-8421 is an investigational drug that specifically targets and depletes cytotoxic T-lymphocytes-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) expressing cells in an effort to directly dismantle the tumor microenvironment for the treatment of patients with advanced solid tumors.
The goal of this observational study is to apply the CNN-based DL method to extract the three-dimensional spatial information of IMRT dose distribution to predict the occurrence probability of serious radiotherapy and chemotherapy induced oral mucositis(SRCOM), and compare with a model based on dosimetry, NTCP or doseomics to improve the prediction accuracy of SRCOM, thus guiding the clinical planning design, reducing the occurrence probability of OM, and may have the potential value of preventing serious complications and improving the quality of life in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
The study will include patients with oral cancer and healthy controls of both sexes. Subjects having any systemic diseases or other types of cancer will be excluded. All subjects will be selected from Oral Medicine Department, Faculty of Dentistry, Al Ahram Canadian University and Fayoum University. Informed consent will be obtained from all subjects enrolled in this study after explanation of the whole procedure.
Although resection provided survival benefit for selected HCC patients with PVTT, the recurrence rate is still high for those patients. It is still unknown whether perioperative Sintilimab, a PD-1antibody, plus bevacizumab biosimilar and TACE-HAIC will improve the survival for those patients. We initialed this phase 2 clinical trial to prove the perioperative therapy.