View clinical trials related to Colorectal Neoplasm.
Filter by:1. To determine whether a combined nutritional support program and exercise-based prehabilitation is superior to nutritional support alone in increasing functional recovery and reducing post-operative morbidity after surgery for HPB malignancy. 2. To understand which measures of immediate surgical recovery are sensitive to prehabilitation interventions and predict change in later outcome measures.
Image-enhanced endoscopy in screening colonoscopy 1. useful tool for detecting subtle epithelial lesions 2. useful tool for predicting real-time histology of epithelial lesions. Among image-enhancing techniques, i-SCAN is new developed and the practical usefulness of i-scan for screening colonoscopy has not been investigated yet.
To investigate safety and tolerance of dose-escalation of infusional recombinant human endostatin in combination with mFOLFOX6 as initial therapy for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer.
The investigators hypothesize that high definition colonoscopy with close focus narrow band imaging features has a high diagnostic accuracy for colorectal polyp histology, and can replace formal pathologic assessment in cases of high diagnostic confidence.
The investigators plan to conduct a multi-center, randomized controlled trial to investigate the efficacy of cap-assisted chromoendoscopy as a screening test for detection of colorectal polyp. This study will be performed using web-based research network, e-VELOS in Korea.
This is an observational, non-interventional, uncontrolled, multicentric safety study in subjects with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-expressing, V-Ki-ras2 Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS) wild-type mCRC. The study aims to collect safety data related to Erbitux treatment from a total of at least 400 mCRC subjects from about 35 institutions from the start of treatment with Erbitux until progressive disease, Erbitux-related intolerable toxicities, death, or withdrawal of Erbitux treatment (whichever occurs first).
Aims: 1. To compare the efficacy of biennial immunochemical fecal occult blood test (iFOBT) versus colonoscopy every 10 years for the reduction of colorectal cancer-related mortality at 10 years in average-risk population. 2. To determine the compliance and complications associated with both strategies. Methods: Multicenter, randomized, controlled study in 8 Spanish regions (Aragón, Canarias, Catalunya, Euskadi, Galicia, Madrid, Murcia and Valencia). Study groups: - Group I: iFOBT (OC Sensor®) in one stool sample, followed by colonoscopy when a positive result. - Group II: colonoscopy. Sample-size calculation: 27,749 subjects in each study group (total: 55,498).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of imatinib mesylate in combination with panitumumab for the treatment of stage IV colorectal cancer that has spread to the liver. It will also assess the whether imatinib mesylate, either alone or in combination with panitumumab, is effective in treating this type of cancer. In addition, the study will evaluate the feasibility of a predefined lab score and whether it can predict which patients will respond to treatment with imatinib mesylate.
The purpose of this randomised intervention study is to investigate to what degree patients with colorectal cancer benefit of dietary counselling regarding nutritional status, oncologic treatment and quality of life.
The objectives for this study include: - Testing a unique way of imaging people with colorectal cancer and other cancers that has spread to the liver using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); - Seeing if the MRI process can be used across multiple imaging platforms; - Determining whether the results of the imaging can be reproduced; - Reviewing how MRI results relate to cancer response to combination therapy and to clinical endpoints.