View clinical trials related to Gastric Cancer.
Filter by:The aim population is histopathologically confirmed locally unresectable advanced recurrent or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the gastric and gastroesophageal junction. Purpose of research to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tripletrumab combined with oxaliplatin and teggio (SOX) in first-line treatment of unreactable locally advanced, recurrent or metastatic gastric and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma. Every 21 days is a cycle, and treatment is scheduled for 6 cycles. Chemotherapy drugs until disease progression, toxicity intolerance, the start of new anti - tumor treatment, withdrawal, loss of access or death, etc., already reached first, shall be the basis for termination. Treatment was effective for more than 6 treatment cycles and toxicity was, the subjects were judged by the researchers when to terminate the treatment and adjust the follow-up treatment plan. For disease progression, toxicity intolerance, and initiation of new antitumor therapies. For subjects who donot reach terminal events such as treatment, withdrawal, loss of follow-up or death, at the end of chemotherapy , the follow-up maintenance regimen was adjusted according to the researchers' evaluation. The screening period of the study was 14 days. The screening test was completed and the evaluation was completed. Subjects with standard discharge entered the treatment period, and the frequency of administration was determined according to the protocol. Conduct treatment and complete relevant tests and assessments before each administration. Tumor imaging was assessed every 6 weeks (±7 days) and all subjects were treated. At the end of the visit, safety and imaging evaluations should be completed. Complete follow-up was conducted for a total of 90 days. Continue to receive tumor evaluation and imaging at a frequency of 2-3 months. Evaluation until disease progression, new antitumor therapy, withdrawal, Lost or dead, etc.
The main objective of this investigator initiated study is to study if preoperative intravenous iron is effective in reducing need for allogenic blood transfusion in patients with gastric cancer who will undergo a standardized gastrectomy including both total and subtotal gastrectomies. The hypothesis is that intravenous iron reduces the need for perioperative blood transfusions.
For the patients with early gastric cancer (T1), preoperative evaluation (gastroscope, ultrasound gastroscope and abdominal enhanced CT) showed that the tumor was located in the body of the stomach, and the margin was enough to retain the pylorus and non lymph node metastasis (N0). Lappg (D1 + lymph node dissection) and traditional laparoscopic distal gastrectomy (BII type anastomosis, D1 + lymph node dissection) were included A control study was conducted to evaluate the difference of long-term quality of life, gastric emptying rate, incidence of basic reflux gastritis, bile contraction function, immune index, nutritional index and disease-free survival and overall survival between the two groups.
The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of intravenous or intraperitoneal paclitaxel plus FOLFOX as first-line treatment in AGC with peritoneal metastases, a phase II Clinical trial.
This study is a single center, phase II study, to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of POF(paclitaxel plus oxaliplatin plus 5-fluorouracil plus leucovorin) , in the neoadjuvant therapy for patients with advanced/metastatic gastric cancer.
This clinical trial is an open-label, single-centre, dose escalation, phase I study designed to investigate the safety and tolerability of Haploidentical / Allogeneic NKG2DL-targeting Chimeric Antigen Receptor-grafted Gamma Delta (γδ) T Cells (CTM-N2D) in Subjects with Relapsed or Refractory Solid Tumour. The study objectives of this phase I study are to determine the safety, activity and the safe dose of haploidentical or allogeneic NKG2DL-targeting chimeric antigen receptor-grafted γδ T cells given four times weekly in patients with relapsed or refractory solid tumors of different types.
Investigators assessed the effectiveness of Nab-paclitaxel combined with S-1 treating diffuse type of stage Ⅲ gastric cancer as adjuvant setting
Early diagnosis of malignant tumors is pivotal for improving their prognoses. Circulating tumor cells (CTC) in peripheral blood and Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath are newly developed diagnosis method. Due to the low percentage of CTCs in peripheral blood of cancer patients and the surface structure of lymphocytes (especially megakaryocytes) is often confused with tumor cells, CTC has a high false positive and negative rate. In recent years, the detection of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath as a simple and noninvasive method has shown broad application prospects in the diagnosis of various diseases. A series of studies of VOCs diagnosing solid tumors the investigators had conducted in the past decade show that VOCs can not only distinguish different types of tumors, but also can make a distinction between different stages. This study was to compare CTC and VOCs with clinical samples. Predictive models will be built employing discriminant factor analysis (DFA) pattern recognition method. Sensitivity and specificity will be determined using leave-one-out cross-validation or an independent blind test set.
Methods National audit of a 90-day prospective observational cohort in which postoperative complications will be analyzed at 30 days of follow-up in adult patients undergoing scheduled surgery for gastric resection for cancer with or without an intensified recovery program (ERAS : Enhanced Recovery after Surgery) with any level of protocol compliance (from 0-100%) Research Locations Spanish Hospitals at the state level where these surgical interventions are performed on a regular basis. Objectives To determine the incidence of postoperative complications per patient and procedure, regardless of the degree of adherence to ERAS protocols and its impact on the hospital stay and postoperative complications including 30-day mortality. Sample Size For an alpha error of 5% (95% confidence) and an accuracy of 3% and estimating a number of patients with complications of 28%, the sample size calculation yields 861 patients, although the final sample size it may be smaller depending on the proportion of complications detected. Inclusion criteria Patients older than 18 years who are going to undergo surgery for gastric resection surgery due to cancer regardless of their affiliation to an ERAS intensified recovery program and the compliance level of the protocol (0-100%) Statistical analysis Continuous variables will be described as mean and standard deviation, if it is a normal distribution, or median and interquartile range, if they are not normally distributed. Comparisons of continuous variables will be performed by one-way ANOVA or the Mann-Whitney test, as appropriate. A univariate analysis will be performed to test the factors associated with postoperative complications, hospital stay and death in the hospital. Univariate analyzes and hierarchical multivariate logistic regression models will be constructed to identify factors associated independently with these results and to adjust for differences in confounding factors. The factors will be introduced in the models based on their relationship with the univariate result (p <0.05), the biological plausibility and the low rate of missing data.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of intraperitoneal and intravenous paclitaxel plus apatinib and S-1 in the conversion therapy of gastric cancer with positive exfoliative cancer cells