View clinical trials related to Colonic Neoplasms.
Filter by:The purpose is to evaluate the effectiveness of high dose intravenous vitamin C (IVC) therapy plus very low carbohydrate diet (VLCD) for stage IV colon cancer (with KRAS and BRAF mutation ) with or without chemotherapy.
Mindsets are lenses or frames of mind that orient individuals to a particular set of expectations and associations. This study aims to leverage specific and empirically supported mindsets (i.e., 'cancer is manageable' and 'the body is capable') to reduce distress and improve physical health and psychological wellbeing in patients with cancer being treated with curative intent. This intervention will take the form of several brief documentary style film segments which feature both cancer survivors and experts in the fields of Oncology, Psychology, and Psychiatry. Although no mindset-targeted interventions have been studied in cancer patients to date, other psychosocial interventions have demonstrated efficacy in treating emotional distress and improving quality of life in this population. However, compared with these standard interventions, mindset interventions need not be lengthy, complex, or costly to yield major effects. Thus, this project aims to lay the groundwork for future scalable and efficient interventions that can meaningfully reduce distress and improve health and wellbeing in this population.
The main goal of this study is to clarify if Robotic-assisted surgery could become the standard approach in patients undergoing left colonic resection. Patient candidates to left colonic resection were randomly assigned to Robotic(RAL) or laparoscopic(LL) approach. The surgical staff who were not involved in the study registered 30-day postoperative morbidity. Cost-benefit analysis was based on hospital days. Long-term morbidity, quality of life, and 5-year survival have also been evaluated
A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Parallel, Multi-Center Study to Assess the Efficacy of BRCX014 Combined with Standard-Of-Care Treatment in Subjects with Glioblastoma Multiforme, Multiple Myeloma, and GI Malignancies
The aim of the study is to develop a computer program which is able to classify different entities of colorectal polyps on the basis of optical polyp features. In the end, the computer program shall differentiate between (i) hypeplastic polyps, (ii) adenomas and (iii) serrated adenomas . In the first phase of the study a computer program will be established which aims to distinguish between the above mentions entities on the basis of optical features derived from still images. A machine learning apporach will be used for creating the program. Afterwards, in a second phase of the study, still images of 100 polyps (not used in the first phase) will be presented to the computer program. Quality of the computer program will be tested by calculating the accuracy for differentiating the three different polyp types. The gold standard for true polyp diagnoses will be based on histopathological diagnoses of the polyps. The same pictures of 100 polyps will also be presented to human experts. Experts will also predict histopathological diagnoses on the basis of optical polyps featurs. Accuracy of computer-decisions and human expert predictions will be compared. The establishment of a well- functioning computer program is the primary aim of the study.
A randomized controlled clinical trial to compare the outcomes of SMA- and SMV- orientated laparoscopic right hemicoloectomy for right colon cancer with a medial-to-lateral approach
The aims of this three-year study are to explore the protective and risk factors of resilience in colorectal cancer patients, and examine the effect of the resilience model-based care plan in reducing fear of recurrence and GI symptom distress and improving quality of life in newly diagnosed colorectal cancer (CRC) patients.
The proposed study will evaluate if "curative intent" SBRT can provide high response rates and clinically meaningful cancer control with acceptable toxicity specifically in patient with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) who do not have surgical options and are no longer responding to systemic therapy
The purpose of the study is to determine the relationship between change of gene copies and recurrenceļ¼and the overall survival at 5 years after chemotherapy based on clinical prognosis compared to Oncocare detection prognosis.
This study aims to determine the oncological effectiveness, compared to standard surgical treatment, of proactive management including target organs for peritoneal spread resection (omentectomy, bilateral adnexectomy, appendectomy, hepatic round ligament resection) and preventive HIPEC (intraperitoneal oxaliplatin with concomitant i.v. 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin) following a curative resection of high-risk ( >/= 5 mm tumor invasion beyond the muscularis propria) T3 and T4 colon cancer in preventing the development of peritoneal metastases. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy will be reserved in both groups for patients with poor prognostic factors according to Folinic acid/Fluorouracil/Oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) or to Capecitabine/Oxaliplatin (CAPOX) regimens. Hypothesis: The hypothesis is that compared to the standard treatment proactive management following curative resection of high-risk T3 and T4 colon cancer will reduce the development of endoperitoneal metastases