View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer Metastatic.
Filter by:Currently, comprehensive treatments for liver metastasis/pulmonary metastasis that cannot reach NED include systemic chemotherapy, interventional chemotherapy, molecular targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and local treatments (ablation therapy, radiation therapy, etc.) for liver metastases. Combination therapy model of local ablation, systemic chemotherapy, and anti-PD -1 monoclonal antibody hopefully can prolong patient survival. This trial will evaluate the effectiveness and safety of carrelizumab combined with microwave ablation and chemotherapy in the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastasis/pulmonary metastasis
Regorafenib has demonstrated a significant benefit in overall survival in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. However, more than 50% of patients had severe adverse events (grade 3-4), leading to temporary or definitive discontinuation of treatment. The RePERSO study proposes to adapt the regorafenib dose regimen taking into account firstly the measurement of sum of metabolites M-2 and M-5 and secondly the occurrence of toxicity during treatment. This treatment personalization through therapeutic drug monitoring pharmacological dosing optimization strategy aims at validating the proof of concept of regorafenib therapeutic drug monitoring and at improving the benefit in OS in patients, using the previously defined Csum therapeutic range.
The registry aims to collect and analyse information on the antineoplastic treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, treated in palliative intention in daily routine practice in Germany.
PRELUDE-1 study is a pilot intervention trial that aims to describe the immunologic and genetic evolutions induced by stereotactic body radiationtherapy (SBRT) treatment in oligometastatic Colorectal Cancer (omCRC) patients with two-three nodules lung-limited disease.
Phase 1 study evaluating feasibility, safety, and immune response to a personalized neoantigen vaccine combined with retifanlimab for MMR-p mCRC and mPDAC patients with measurable disease following first-line FOLFIRINOX/FOLFOXIRI (FFX).
This prospective, multicenter, single arm clinical trial was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Vemurafenib in combination with Irinotecan and Cetuximab in the treatment of BRAF V600E-Mutant Metastatic Colorectal Cancer.
The aim on this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of the anti-VEGFR2 monoclonal antibody olinvacimab and the capecitabine in patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma who failed two prior chemotherapies
NIPISAFE is open-label, phase II study to identify a combination scheme of nivolumab and ipilimumab with a high level of clinical activity, but with a lower toxicity in MSI/dMMR metastatic colorectal cancer patients.
The study will be conducted in compliance with Good Clinical Practices (ICH-GCP) and the Declaration of Helsinki, and in accordance with applicable legal and regulatory requirements, including archiving of essential documents.
Bevacizumab combined with fluorouracil-based chemotherapy is the first-line standard treatment for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). However, some research show that the long-term survival benefit of patients in real world data is inferior to clinical trial. The reason may be related to the difference in follow-up strategy of patients in the real world. Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) are a kind of outcome indicators that directly measure and evaluate the disease and its consequences based on how the patient feels about his own health. In advanced cancer, quality of life (QoL) is a major treatment goal. And the electronic patient report outcome (ePRO) has become an effective method to capture the symptoms of patients, which can improve the quality of life and physical and mental health of patients. In order to observe whether ePRO can bring clinical benefits to patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, this study aimed to compare the effects of ePRO and routine follow-up on the quality of life and prognosis of patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer who received first-line bevacizumab combined with chemotherapy. This is an open label, multicenter, randomized controlled prospective study of first-line bevacizumab combined with chemotherapy in patients with unretractable metastatic colorectal cancer.The aim of this study was to assess the impact of ePRO on quality of life and survival outcomes compared with routine follow-up.The study intends to start in February 2021 and end in June 2024.Patients were recruited for 12 months and followed up for 24 months.The study included a screening period (28 days before first-line treatment to 1 day before treatment) and an observation period (from the beginning of treatment to the end of the study).Day 1 (baseline) was defined as the first day of first-line bevacizumab combined with chemotherapy.About 338 patients will be enrolled in the study in China, and enrolled patients will be randomly assigned to one of the following two groups in a 1:1 ratio.