View clinical trials related to Gastric Cancer.
Filter by:The goal of this trial is to demonstrate that the use of Tri-Staple Technology for duodenal resection during open gastrectomy for cancer is safer than the use of other conventional methods of resection/closure of the duodenum and that the incidence of duodenal fistula can be decreased to that observed after the use of this technology in Laparoscopic and robotic gastrectomy, therefore almost three times lower than that currently reported in literature. Participating centres must have an annual volume of at least 20 gastrectomies per year.
The purpose of this study is to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD)and safety of Apatinib combined with S-1 as Second-line therapy for patients with advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma.
Antiangiogenesis therapy plays an important role in cancer treatment. Apatinib showed good safety and efficacy as third-line therapy for advanced gastric cancer.We conducted this trial to investigate the safety and efficacy of apatinib combined with S1 after failure of first-line chemotherapy in advanced gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction carcinoma patients.
The purpose of this study is to compare the survival rate according to the presence or absence of 14v lymph node dissection.
Explore the Efficiency and Safety of Paclitaxel + S-1 + Oxaliplatin (PSOX) Chemotherapy in the Patients with Locally Advanced or Advanced Gastric Cancer
This is a multi-center, open-label phase IIA study that investigates the preliminary efficacy of Trans-arterial Tirapazamine Embolization (TATE) treatment of liver cancer followed by a PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor (nivolumab). Patients with two types of cancers will be enrolled, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC),and metastatic gastric cancer. All enrolled patients need to have liver lesions and have progressed on a prior immune checkpoint inhibitor.
This is a prospective randomized controlled clinical trial to clarify the effect of early oral nutrition introduction after total gastrectomy in gastric cancer patients on the length of hospital stay, comparing an experimental group vs control group.
- discovery and validation of biomarker predicting gastric cancer chemotherapy response - Analysis for expression level of mRNA using Next generation sequencing in gastric cancer tissue by chemotherapy response - Analysis for expression level of miRNA using Next generation sequencing in gastric cancer tissue and blood by chemotherapy response - Validation of mRNA and miRNA using qRT-PCR in multiple independent cohort - Biological biomarkers-clinical factor combined prediction model of gastric cancer chemotherapy response
Osteoporosis after gastrectomy, which is characterized by both the loss of bone mass and the deterioration of bone architecture, is a serious complication in the long course after gastrectomy. The aim of the present study was to evaluate osteoporosis by using high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) in the long course after gastrectomy. In total gastrectomy and distal gastrectomy groups, at least 5 years should have elapsed since gastrectomy.
The project will aim to identify and determine subgroups of patients with different risks of progression to gastric cancer and to assess appropriate follow-up intervals. Implementing risk stratification only high risk individuals will be offered and performed endoscopic surveillance.