View clinical trials related to Colonic Neoplasms.
Filter by:To goal of this clinical trial is to quantify the dose-response effects of aerobic exercise training compared to attention control on chemotherapy relative dose intensity in colon cancer survivors.
Magnetic endoscopic imaging (scopeguide) is known to be helpful for colonoscope insertion, especially beginner endoscopist. In this trial, study was designed to show the efficacy and safety pertinent to scopeguide use in detail.
This clinical trial evaluates whether an adaptive text-message intervention is useful in helping survivors of colorectal cancers (CRC) eat more whole grain foods and less refined grain foods. Most CRC survivors don't achieve the recommended intakes of whole grains or fiber, even though there is strong evidence that a high-fiber diet rich in whole grains lowers the risk of death from CRC. Dietary interventions are a promising approach for reducing death from CRC, and text message interventions specifically are a promising tool for reaching diverse populations. This trial evaluates a text-message based dietary intervention that continuously adapts message content to be specifically tailored for the participant for increasing whole grain consumption.
Multicentric randomised trial. The goal of this clinical research study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of serplulimab combined with FOLFIRI+bevacizumab in the treatment of pMMR/Ras/BRAF wild-type unresectable peritoneal metastasis of colon cancer.
Mortality following elective colorectal cancer surgery range between 2.5-6% and increase for the elderly and frail patient regardless of T-stage. Around 80% of the patients who present with a colon cancer and is in a condition where surgery is possible will be offered resection of the tumor. A part of the colon is always removed together with the lymph nodes in order to ensure that cancer cells are not left behind. The risk of lymph node metastasis is dependent on several histopathological characteristics of the tumor. The overall risk of lymph node metastases is less than 20 % in patients with early colon cancer. This indicates that the majority of patients with early colon cancer have no benefit of additional resection besides local tumor excision. The alternative to resecting a larger part of the bowel is to make more focused surgery only resecting a small part of the bowel part through a combination of laparoscopic and endoscopic techniques. This new organ sparing approach is called Combined Endoscopic Laparoscopic Surgery (CELS). The investigators aimed to examinate the hypothesis that organ preserving approach (CELS) provides superior quality of recovery in elderly frail patients with small colon cancers when compared with standard surgery in RCT.
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 purpose of this research protocol is to compare open versus laparoscopic right colectomy (according to the CME technique of complete mesocolic excision) for right colon cancer. This study will be designed as a prospective randomized controlled trial. The comparison of the two techniques will include endpoints regarding the quality characteristics of the specimens and the oncological results. In addition, the effectiveness of the two methods will be evaluated in terms of the early and late postoperative period.
This phase II/III trial compares treatment with encorafenib and cetuximab to usual care (patient observation) for reducing the chance of cancer recurrence after standard surgery and chemotherapy in patients with BRAF-mutated stage IIB-III colon cancer. Encorafenib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Cetuximab is in a class of medications called monoclonal antibodies. It binds to a protein called EGFR, which is found on some types of tumor cells. This may help keep tumor cells from growing. Giving encorafenib and cetuximab after standard surgery and chemotherapy may be more effective at reducing the chance of cancer recurrence compared to the usual patient observation.
This study is designed as a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Subjects in the intervention group will be treated with XLJDOD compound granule. Subjects in the control group will be treated with placebo (XLJDOD mimetic agent).
In this study, it will be investigated whether the methods of self-regulation of mental state have an effect on postoperative pain perception in colon cancer patients.