View clinical trials related to Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:Based upon biological behavior, those mCRC patients who respond well (SD, PR or CR according to RECIST Criteria) after 16-18 weeks of standard doublet chemotherapy as induction may enrolled into this study, randomly divided into capecitabine metronomic group or standard dosage group. The duration of disease control after randomization(PFS2) and progression free survival from enrollment (PFS1) are primary endpoints. Meanwhile, the overall survival, safety and quality of life are secondary endpoints. Exploratory markers involving angiogenesis (serum VEGF, PDGF, Tie-1 and Tie2, etc) and immune function (CD clusters, serum tumor mutation burden(TMB), etc), are conducted via liquid biopsy.
This is a single arm open label pilot phase II trial of Regorafenib PO plus 5-FU/LV infusion in 15 mCRC patients who progressed on prior Regorafenib monotherapy as well as 5-FU containing chemotherapy combinations.The study will enroll mCRC patients with prior progression on standard multi-agent combination chemotherapy and progression on regorafenib monotherapy.
Multicenter, multinational, randomized, 3-arm, double-blind, phase II clinical study with 2400mg mesalamine, 1200mg mesalamine or placebo for prevention of colorectal neoplasia in Lynch Syndrome patients for 2 years.
Background: Colorectal cancer is a common cancer in the Unites States (U.S.) It causes the second most cancer-related deaths. The drug avelumab and vaccine Ad-CEA together help the immune system fight cancer. Objective: To test if avelumab and Ad-CEA plus standard therapy treats colorectal cancer that has spread to other sites better than standard therapy alone. Eligibility: People ages 18 and older with untreated colorectal cancer that has spread in the body Design: Participants will be screened with: Test to see if their cancer has a certain deficiency Blood, urine, and heart tests Scans Medical history Physical exam Tumor sample. This can be from a previous procedure. A small group of participants will get Ad-CEA and avelumab plus standard therapy. This is leucovorin calcium (folinic acid), fluorouracil, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) plus bevacizumab for up to 24 weeks then capecitabine plus bevacizumab. The others will have treatment in 2-week cycles. They will be Arm A or B: Arm A: FOLFOX and bevacizumab by intravenous (IV) days 1 and 2 for 12 cycles. After that, capecitabine by mouth twice a day and bevacizumab by IV on day 1. Arm B: Ad-CEA injection every 2-12 weeks. Avelumab by IV on day 1 of each cycle. FOLFOX and bevacizumab by IV days 2 and 3 for 12 cycles. Then, capecitabine by mouth twice a day and bevacizumab through IV on day 2. Participants will repeat screening tests during the study. Participants will be treated until their disease gets worse or they have bad side effects. Arm A participants can join Arm B. They will have a visit 4 5 weeks after they stop therapy.
This is a multicenter, open-label, Phase 1 study of SC-006 given as a single agent and in combination with ABBV-181 in participants with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC), and consists of Part A (single agent SC-006 dose regimen finding), followed by Part B (single agent SC-006 dose expansion), and Part C (SC-006 and ABBV-181 combination escalation and expansion). Part A (dose regimen finding) will involve dose escalation and possible dose interval modification to define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and/or recommended Part B dose and schedule. Part B (dose expansion) will enroll additional participants who will be treated with a study drug dose at or below the MTD determined in Part A. Part C is dose escalation of SC-006 and fixed dose of ABBV-181 in combination. Recommended dose cohort of SC-006 with ABBV-181 will be expanded.
The primary objective of this study is to determine the anti-tumor activity, as measured by overall response rate (ORR) of atezolizumab in combination with bevacizumab in patients with chemotherapy resistant CRC and positivity for MSI-like molecular signature. This is an international, open-label single arm (non-randomized), one-stage phase II trial.
This study is to define the safety profile and to determine the Maximal tolerated dose regimen and preliminary efficacy of AbGn-107 administered every 14 days (Q2W regimen) or 28 days (Q4W regimen) in patients with chemo-refractory locally advanced, recurrent or metastatic gastric, colorectal, pancreatic or biliary cancer.
This study will be the first to examine the effects of a functional resistance exercise programme that closely replicates daily activities and their effects on quality of life, body composition and functional fitness in cancer survivors. This study will also use a supervised and group based exercise setting to help with socialisation and confidence with an aim to improve the exercise experience. Eligible participants should be 18-90 years old, been treated for colorectal cancer (stages I-IV) in the previous 3 months to five years and with no limitations to exercise. The study will include a 12-week exercise period where participants will be randomly allocated to the control group or to take part in 32 supervised one-hour group exercise sessions involving exercises to target the whole body at a moderate intensity which will take place in the Mountbatten Centre, Pyramids Centre, Fareham Leisure Centre or Horizons Leisure Centres. Depending on participants' membership status those in the control group could use the centre's exercise referral programme, which has a cost attached, or they will be encouraged to meet national physical activity recommendations by walking 30 minutes per day on most days of the week. The only difference between the two groups will be the supervised group functional resistance training. At the beginning and end of the 12-week study period a number of health-related fitness tests will be performed to assess health outcomes, such as resting blood pressure & heart rate, respiratory function, body fat measures (body mass index, waist circumference and body fat %), functional performance measurements, handgrip strength, a 6 minute walk test and self-efficacy to regulate exercise and measures of quality of life questionnaires. Participants will be provided with their own results and an overview of the whole study data.
To study effects the Quell device has on opioid consumption and pain relief in patients with cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine the maximum tolerated dose (which will be the dose recommended for a Phase 2 study), safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetic profile (study of movement of the drug within the body, including absorption and distribution) of the study drug, BNC101 when administered intravenously as a single agent or in combination with chemotherapy in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who have failed at least 1 or 2 lines of chemotherapy.