View clinical trials related to Esophageal Cancer.
Filter by:After the esophagectomy, the stomach is most commonly used to restore continuity of the upper gastro-intestinal tract. The esophagogastric anastomosis is prone to serious complications such as anastomotic leakage (AL) The reported incidence of AL after esophagectomy ranges from 5%-20%. The AL associated mortality ranges from 18-40% compared with an overall in-hospital mortality of 4-6%. The main cause of AL is tissue hypoxia, which results from impaired perfusion of the pedicle stomach graft. Clinical judgment is unreliable in determining anastomotic perfusion. Therefore, an objective, validated, and reproducible method to evaluate tissue perfusion at the anastomotic site is urgently needed. Indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) is a near infrared fluorescent (NIRF) perfusion imaging using indocyanine green (ICG). ICGA is a safe, easy and reproducible method for graft perfusion analysis, but it is not yet calibrated. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of quantification of ICGA to assess graft perfusion and its influence on AL in patients after minimally invasive Ivor Lewis esophagectomy (MIE) for cancer.
A randomized trial comparing perioperative outcomes between bilateral transversus abdominis plane TAP catheters with patient controlled analgesia (PCA) to epidural for esophagectomy patients with a VATS chest approach. Further objectives are to determine pain requirements between multiple modalities of pain control and compare the subsequent sequelae of narcotic use and blood pressure control and to compare complications such as anastomotic leak, atrial fibrillation and perioperative morbidity and mortality between the two groups.
This is a Phase 1/2a, open-label, multi-center study of JAB-3068 in Patients with advanced solid tumors.This study has two phases: dose escalation phase and dose expansion phase.
For locally advanced esophageal cancer (EC), neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) for 5 weeks followed by esophagectomy and lymphadenectomy, if necessary, is standard of care. It is reported that the pathological complete response (pCR) rate after nCRT ranges from 16% to 43%, with a median of 26.5%. According to current clinical guidelines, patients who achieved pCR still go for surgery even though those patients who achieved pCR may not benefit from surgery. Besides, about 50% of EC patients may have post-operative complications including pneumonia, anastomotic leakage, recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis, which lead to low health-related quality of life (HQoL). The golden standard to test the pathological response is by pathological assessment of the surgical specimen and thus after surgery. Theoretically, if pCR after nCRT can be predicted accurately before surgery by advanced imaging techniques, patients could have a wait-and-see. The wait-and-see procedure includes regular follow-up and salvage surgery if recurrence is present. Therefore, molecular fluorescence endoscopy (FME) using near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) tracer bevacizumab-800CW targeting vascular endothelial growth factor combined with high-definition white light (HD-WL) endoscopy is expected to be a promising technique to monitor pCR and fill the gap.
This is a multicenter, open-label, Phase 1 study of orally administered VMD-928 in adult subjects with advanced solid tumors or lymphoma that have progressed or are non responsive to available therapies and for which no standard or available curative therapy exists
Patients with resectable solid primary cancers and even limited number of metastases are potentially curable. However, most patients develop recurrences despite surgery. Also, early detection of lung cancer with low dose CT screening may cure patients at an early stage. Circulating and disseminated tumor cell (CTC/DTC) and circulating cell-free (cf) DNA isolation from the blood, urine and bone marrow will increase understanding of cancer spread and advance knowledge to develop individualized therapies and improve screening.
Three parallel cohort, multicenter, open-label, phase I/II clinical trial to analyze the safety and feasibility of PD-1 inhibition with Nivolumab given concomitantly with standard radiotherapy regimens in the treatment of esophageal cancer
The purpose of this first-in-human study of CX-2029 is to characterize the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD) and antitumor activity of CX-2029 in adult subjects with metastatic or locally advanced unresectable solid tumors or diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The antitumor activity of CX-2029 will be evaluated in subjects with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), DLBCL, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) (squamous cell histology only), or esophageal (esophageal adenocarcinoma [EAC], esophageal squamous cell carcinoma [ESCC], or gastroesophageal [GE] junction) cancer. PROCLAIM: PRObody CLinical Assessment In Man CX-2029 clinical trial 001 PROBODY is a trademark of CytomX Therapeutics, Inc
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of INCAGN02385 in participants with advanced malignancies.
To assess the efficacy and feasibility of high-dose intensity-modulated radiotherapy with concurrent weekly paclitaxel and cisplatin for patients with locoregionally advanced esophageal cancer