View clinical trials related to Colon Cancer Stage I.
Filter by:Patients with stage I (pT1-2 N0 M0) colon cancer (CC) accounts for 15-20% of colonic neoplasia. Stage I CC is mostly cured with surgical resection, consequently, adjuvant chemotherapy is never considered for this subset of patients. Moreover, some international guidelines, including NCCN guidelines, recommend less intensive follow-up 1. However, around 5% of patients with stage I CC will develop a recurrence within 5 years from surgery. Despite the very good prognosis usually attributed to this stage (5-years relapse-free survival: 95%), some clinical and pathological factors beyond the standard AJCC staging may be associated with worse clinical features and may aid in prognostic stratification. Although some authors investigated the role of pathological and clinical factors in patients with stage II and III disease, only few data are available for patients with stage I CC1. The present multicentric retrospective study aims to: 1. Assess the actual incidence of recurrence in a large cohort of patients with stage I CC undergone curative resection. 2. Investigate the clinical and pathological characteristics of patients who developed a recurrence, with the aim of identifying those associated with a significantly increased risk. 3. Analyze the pattern of recurrence. 4. Analyze survival after recurrence.
The investigators will assess and compare Surgical, pathological and oncological outcomes between two laparoscopic procedures conventional colectomy versus complete mesocolic excision for operable colon cancer cases in Upper Egypt
This is a Phase I, open-label study to explore the safety profile and to find the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) or maximum feasible dose (MFD) of Magicell-NK in subjects diagnosed with stage I or stage IIa colon cancer post resection from a single site in Taiwan. During this study, 3 dose levels of Magicell-NK will be tested with a 3+3 design to determine the MTD/MFD: Cohort 1, low dose (2×108 cells), Cohort 2, middle dose (6×108 cells), and Cohort 3, high dose (18 ×108 cells).
This is a pilot feasibility study on high risk patients due to frailty and comorbidity who have early stage colon cancer (UICC 1). We will use a novel resection technique with expected less risk of complications called the Combined Endoscopic and Laparoscopic Surgery (CELS). After the histopathologic evaluation. Patients will be placed in either low risk or high risk group. Depending on this, they will be followed for 3 years or referred to standard resection