View clinical trials related to Gastric Cancer.
Filter by:This study aims to compare the efficacy and safety of reduced adjuvant XELOX treatment (4 cycles of XELOX followed by 4 cycles of capecitabine alone) to standard adjuvant XELOX treatment (8 cycles of XELOX).
Immunotherapy acquired resistance was observed in clinical practice. The investigators intended to add anlotinib to PD-1 inhibitors, hoping reverse the resistance.
This is a phase II clinical trial assessing the safety and efficacy of sequential systemic and intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy in patients with primary gastric/gastroesophageal junction cancer with cytology positive peritoneal lavage and/or peritoneal carcinomatosis.
This study is an open label phase 2 study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Lenvatinib with Pembrolizumab or Lenvatinib, Pembrolizumab and FLOT in the neoadjuvant / adjuvant treatment for Patients with Gastric Cancer.
For locally advanced esophagogastric junction and gastric cancer (cT3-4aNxM0 or cT2N+M0), neoadjuvant chemotherapy can downstage T and N stage,treated distant micrometastases early before local therapy has begun, and finally improve the long-term survival. Combination of perioperative PD-1 antibody and chemotherapy for locally advanced esophagogastric junction and gastric cancer could be a novel therapy to increase response rate and reduce recurrence rate. JS001 in this study is a Chinese anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody for injection which has been approved for melanoma. This study is a multi-center, open-label, randomized phase II clinical trial to evaluate safety and efficacy of JS001 in combination with perioperative chemotherapy in locally advanced esophagogastric junction and gastric cancer. Differences in gut microbiome and tumor immune microenvironment were detected to screen people who were more sensitive to immunotherapy.
This study is a multi-center, prospective, randomized controlled study. The aim of this study is to compare survival rates and to observe quality of life and nutritional status according to follow-up period in patients who underwent radical gastrectomy for stage 2 or 3 gastric cancer.
A high number of resected lymph nodes is an independent prognostic factor for improved survival after esophagectomy or gastrectomy for cancer. The quality of the lymphadenectomy is operator-dependent, as is the evaluation of the vascularization of the digestive structures that are anastomosed to restore digestive continuity after esophago-gastric resection. The aim of the study is to evaluate the impact of Indocyanine Green (ICG) and near infra-red (NIR) fluorescence imaging guidance in terms of number of lymph nodes resected and quality of gastrointestinal tract anastomoses in esophagogastric cancer surgery.
Propofol is the most commonly used intravenous anesthetic for painless gastroscopy, but propofol significantly inhibits the respiratory and circulatory systems. Therefore, the incidence of intraoperative hypoxemia and hypotension is high. Remazolam tosylate is an ultra-short-acting benzodiazepine drug, which has a mild inhibitory effect on the respiratory and circulatory systems and has anterograde amnesia. These advantages make remazolam tosylate very likely to replace propofol in painless gastroscopic anesthesia.
This is an open-label, Phase 1b study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of IDX-1197 and determine the MTD and RP2D in combination with XELOX or irinotecan in patients with advanced gastric cancer.
This is a Phase III, randomized, multicenter, open-label clinical trial designed to compare RC48-ADC to physician choice standard treatment in participants with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-overexpression locally advanced or metastatic gastric cancer.