View clinical trials related to Gastric Adenocarcinoma.
Filter by:This clinical trial studies the effectiveness of a home-based exercise and nutrition monitoring program called Pt Pal in improving strength in patients with pancreatic or stomach cancer receiving chemoradiation therapy before surgery. Pt Pal is a mobile health technology used to facilitate communication between the care team and the patient/caregiver, by allowing the care team to send from their web-portal, exercise routines, activities of daily living, diet recommendations, surveys and educational material to the patient/caregiver's mobile device. The Pt Pal application (app) then captures the patient/caregiver activity adherence data and reports those results back to the care team. The Pt Pal program may help improve overall strength in patients undergoing surgery for pancreatic and stomach cancer relative to standard care.
This phase I finds out the possible benefits and/or side effects of using magnetic tracer FerroTrace and the fluorescent dye indocyanine green to identify the lymph nodes that cancer is most likely to have spread to in patients with gastric cancer that are undergoing gastrectomy. Using FerroTrace in combination with the indocyanine green dye may help researchers better detect the disease.
This study is an open-label, single-arm, multicenter, Phase 2 study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with T-DXd monotherapy in patients with HER2-positive gastric cancer.
A randomized, Double-blind, Multicenter, phase III Clinical Study of Comparing the Efficacy and Safety of AK104 Plus Oxaliplatin and Capecitabine (XELOX) Versus Placebo Plus XELOX as First-line Treatment for locally advanced Unresectable or Metastatic Gastric Adenocarcinoma or Gastroesophageal Junction Adenocarcinoma.
A Phase 2/3 Study of Evorpacept (ALX148) in Combination With Trastuzumab, Ramucirumab, and Paclitaxel in Patients With Advanced HER2-overexpressing gastric/GEJ adenocarcinoma.
This study is a single-arm, single center study. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of FMT capsules XBI-302 combined with Nivolumab in the treatment of anti-PD-1/L1 resistant gastric cancer.
The aim of the trial is to investigate the clinical efficacy and toxicity of perioperative chemotherapy with leucovorin, oxaliplatin, docetaxel and S-1 (LOTS) in patients with locally advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma who receive a curative surgery.
This study investigates the prognostic role of liquid biopsy in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer. Liquid biopsy for the detection of circulating tumor DNA will be performed: - In the peritoneal lavage, during staging laparoscopy (if indicated) and during curative gastrectomy - In plasma, before staging laparoscopy (if indicated), before curative gastrectomy, at hospital discharge, three months after surgery/at the end of adjuvant therapy, and in case of disease recurrence. The aim of this study is to determine the predictive power of liquid biopsy on overall survival and disease free survival.
This study is designed for participants who have cancer of the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract such as cancer of the esophagus, stomach, duodenum (the initial portion of your small intestine), pancreas, bile duct (Cholangiocarcinoma), ampulla, or gall bladder with limited sites of spread (metastases). Doctors leading this study are looking to see if treating the disease using sequential procedures (more than one procedure given one after another) such as surgeries or radiation can lead to better survival and if these surgeries, combined with standard of care treatment, are safe for the treatment of upper GI cancers.
Perioperative drug treatment has gradually become the standard regimen for locally advanced gastric cancer, whereas only a subset of patients could benefit from it. Therefore, one major challenge for perioperative drug treatment is to construct promising biomarkers and to screen out potential beneficial patients. Recent evidence has revealed that tumor microenvironment (TME) is highly associated with the prognosis of gastric cancer. Meanwhile, tumor microenvironment score (TMEscore) established with transcriptomic data is a robust biomarker for predicting prognosis and guiding individualized immunotherapy strategies. However, its predictive value for perioperative drug treatment outcomes warrants further exploration and validation. The study is a multi-center, observational study to evaluate the relationship between the efficacy of perioperative treatment and tumor microenvironment in patients with locally advanced resectable gastric and gastro-oesophageal junction adenocarcinoma, aiming at further determining the predictive value of TMEscore and establishing a comprehensive treatment-efficacy evaluation system for gastric cancer.