View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:In Canada, over 102,900 men are diagnosed with cancer each year. Of these, 81,000 are diagnosed with colorectal cancer and an estimated 65% are expected to survive the disease for at least 5 years. Men who have completed treatment for colorectal cancer face many adverse physical, cognitive, psychological, and social effects. The Wellness Beyond Cancer Program at The Ottawa Hospital is a cancer survivorship program that helps people who have completed treatment for cancer, including men diagnosed with colorectal cancer, manage these effects. The Wellness Beyond Cancer Program does this through education and referral to supportive care services and programs offered throughout the city of Ottawa. Group-based physical activity programs are one of the varied services and programs available to adults diagnosed with cancer in Ottawa. Such programs are offered through the Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation (http://www.ottawacancer.ca) and Breast Cancer Action Ottawa (http://bcaott.ca). Research on these programs show that group-based physical activity can improve disease and treatment-related effects while promoting overall quality of life amongst women with cancer. However, few of these programs have targeted men, even though their needs and preferences have been shown to be very different from women. While men diagnosed with colorectal cancer might also benefit from group-based physical activity programs offered in the community, it is not known if such programs would effectively reach them and what the impact would be on their quality of life after cancer treatment. It is believed that a men's group-based walking program could be an effective way to reach men and promote quality of life after cancer treatment. Therefore, a sustainable 8-week group-based walking program was developed. This project will seek to explore the feasibility and potential benefits of the program among men who have completed treatment for colorectal cancer and who are referred to the program from staff at the Wellness Beyond Cancer Program in a prospective single-arm trial.
Objective: To compare the outcome of patients with colorectal cancer who treated with adjuvant therapy or Apatinib with adjuvant therapy postoperatively. Language: English.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of apatinib in combination with second-line FOLFOX or FOLFIRI for metastatic colorectal cancer in patients with disease progression during or after first-line therapy.
This is a phase 1b/2 study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of metronomic combination therapy in subjects with recurrent and metastatic CRC.
This study is a randomized phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy of adjuvant consolidative radiotherapy in colorectal cancer liver metastasis (CRLM) patients after chemotherapy combined with surgical resection or radiofrequency ablation of liver lesions.
The purpose of this randomized study is to assess the efficacy of a mobile application for the promotion of healthy lifestyle habits (diet and exercise) in colorectal cancer survivors (CCR).
A phase 1b/2a study evaluating the combination of MM-151 + nal-IRI + 5-FU + Leucovorin in RAS/RAF wild-type Metastatic Colorectal Cancer.
Chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-T) therapy has not yet been fully explored in solid tumors. Human epidermal growth factor receptor-2(HER2) is widely expressed in cancers. Investigators have developed anti-HER2 CAR-modified T cells and validated the efficiency targeting HER2-positive cancer in preclinical studies. This study is aimed to confirm its adverse effects including cytokine storm response and any other adverse effects. In addition, CAR-T cells persistence, tumor elimination and disease status after treatment will be evaluated.
Two-part phase 1B clinical trial combining cextuximab and savolitinib for treating Ras wild-type colorectal cancer (CRC). Part 1 will assess the safety and tolerability of this drug combination and will include patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck cancer, as well as patients with CRC. Part 2 of the study, the focus of this registration, will obtain further safety data for the combination of cextuximab and savolitinib and will look at the efficacy of cextuximab and savolitinib in Ras wild-type mCRC that was previously treated and relapsed on cetuximab or panitumumab.Correlative studies will examine tumor and blood specimens for mechanisms of anti-EGFR resistance and response to MET inhibition.
Patients with colorectal cancer that had metastatic lesions after been treated with definitive surgery or chemoradiotherapy are being asked to participate in this study. 1. To observe immunity-mediated tumor response outside the radiation field (abscopal effect) after chemoradiotherapy of a metastatic site in metastatic colorectal cancer patients. 2. To induce the efficacy (effectiveness) of a new combination of therapy, chemoradiotherapy and thymalfasin for heavily pretreated, metastatic esophageal cancer patients; 3. To explore the role of PET/CT scanning to assess tumor response/abscopal effect. This study will help find out what abscopal effects (good or bad) the combination of radiotherapy and thymalfasin has on metastatic esophageal cancer.