View clinical trials related to Colorectal Neoplasms.
Filter by:Establish the clinical technology system of routine adjuvant therapy combined with personalized immune regulation diagnosis and treatment technology for postoperative anti-relapse adjuvant therapy: Patients with MRD positive and high risk of recurrence after colorectal cancer surgery were enrolled. Surgical tumor tissue and blood samples were collected, tumor tissue samples were sequenced, neoantigens were analyzed, personalized immunomodulators were prepared, and routine adjuvant therapy combined with personalized immunomodulatory diagnosis and treatment technology were performed to prevent postoperative recurrence. To establish the clinical technology system of routine adjuvant therapy combined with personalized immune regulation diagnosis and treatment technology for postoperative anti-relapse adjuvant therapy
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of liposomal irinotecan plus bevacizumab in irinotecan-refractory metastatic colorectal cancer
This work aims to Investigate the role of circulating notch associated lncRNAs SNHG3 and LUNAR1 as possible non invasive prognostic biomarkers for colorectal cancer (CRC) monitoring via measuring the gene expression level of lncRNAs SNHG3 and LUNAR1 in serum of CRC patients compared with control subjects. Also, to investigate the correlation between SNHG3 and LUNAR1 expression levels and CRC clinicopathological features and their relevance for CRC patients' clinico-pathological features outcomes assessment
In this phase II study patients with stage II-III MSI/dMMR colorectal adenocarcinoma with no signs of distant metastases will be treated with immunotherapy (prolgolimab). The duration of treatment is 6 months (12 cycles)
Elucidate the role of lncRNA CCDC144NL-AS1, hsa-miR-143-3p, and HMGA2 protein as non-invasive epigenetic molecular biomarkers in liquid biopsy of CRC Egyptian patients, individually or as an interaction arm and in comparison, to the conventional protein TMs. In addition, the investigators investigated the potential role of lncRNA CCDC144NL-AS1 as a mediator for development and/or progression of the cancer phenotype as well as CRC metastasis and its relation to both hsa-miR-143-3p and HMGA2, clinically and in silico.
Patients aged >40 years who underwent elective colonoscopies were recruited from ten institutions. Patients with a history of colorectal cancer or long-term dietary interventions were excluded. Participants completed a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) prior to endoscopy. FFQ data were analyzed using energy-, age-, sex-, and body mass index-adjusted models; the dietary supplemental omega-3 intake was analyzed separately. Colonoscopy outcome data, including the adenoma number, pathology, and location, were collected. Participants were stratified into omega-3 consumption quartiles to assess colorectal adenoma incidence trends using P for trend analysis.
The study aims to recruit 60 Spanish speaking individuals who identify as Latinos, are older than 18 years old and attend the Saint Thomas More (STM) Church in Chapel Hill. Study participants will be asked to attend an educational session at STM Church during which their baseline knowledge on colorectal cancer (CRC) and willingness to participate in cancer clinical trials (CCT) will be assessed through a questionnaire in Spanish. Following this, participants will watch three educational videos on CRC in Spanish. After watching the videos, CRC knowledge and willingness to participate in CCTs will be reassessed. Thirty +/- 7 days after participation in the educational session, participants will be invited back at STM Church in order to complete a follow-up questionnaire assessing CRC knowledge, willingness to participate in CCTs and perceived barriers preventing Latinos from participating in CCTs. Twenty of the 60 recruited participants will be asked to participate in a qualitative one-on-one interview aimed at identifying barriers preventing Latinos from participating in CCTs. It should be noted that cancer is the leading cause of death in the United States (US) Latino community, with CRC accounting for 10% of this overall mortality. Despite this, Latinos suffer from disparities in access to care, cancer screening, treatment, and representation in CCTs. In fact, although Latino individuals are among the largest and fastest growing communities of color in the US, currently comprising 18.7%, their representation in CCTs remains low. This is of concern because: 1) advances arising from trials with limited Latino representation may not be applicable to the Latino population, and 2) decreased Latino participation in CCTs may delay Latino access to novel therapies in a timely fashion. The investigators conducting this study believe that low cancer-specific health knowledge may be impacting Latino representation and willingness to participate in CCTs and can be addressed through culturally and linguistically appropriate community-based educational interventions. Latino CCT underrepresentation is a multifaceted phenomenon and bidirectional barriers at the physician-, healthcare system-, and patient-level are significant contributors. Therefore, understanding the multiple driving forces and barriers is essential to identifying potential targets for improvement.
The main objective is to evaluate the impact of a Regorafenib combined with metronomic chemotherapy (capecitabine and cyclophosphamide) and low-dose aspirin compared to standard Regorafenib treatment in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer by assessing progression-free survival.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of cancer mortality in the United States, and African Americans (AfAms) still fare worse in CRC incidence and mortality compared to European Americans (EuAms). We propose to examine whether combining both fear-reduction and racially-targeted norm-based messages will increase at-home stool-based CRC screening receptivity and uptake for all African American regardless of level of racial identity. Given low return rates of at-home screening kits, we will also explore whether making an explicit commitment to return screening kits is associated with increased kit returns.
Liver metastasis is the main cause of death in patients with colorectal cancer. The treatment of liver metastasis of colorectal cancer is the key to prolong the survival of patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy and safety of fruquintinib combined with Camrelizumab and HAIC regimen in the treatment of non-MSI-H advanced colorectal cancer patients with liver metastasis after first-line standard treatment failure. Compared with the current standard second-line treatment plan, it provides new decisions for clinical practice, in order to reduce the adverse reactions of treatment and improve the tolerance and efficacy of patients. To provide more and more optimized medication options for patients with non-MSI-H advanced colorectal cancer complicated with liver metastasis.