View clinical trials related to Gastric Cancer.
Filter by:The standard treatment for advanced gastric cancer without metastases is gastrectomy, where the whole stomach or a large proportion is removed surgically together with regional lymph nodes. Some patients cannot tolerate this invasive procedure because of old age or comorbidities. A tumor left in place can cause local symptoms such as bleeding or outlet obstruction. In this study, the investigators want to test the safety and feasibility of Laparoscopic and Endoscopic Collaborative Surgery (LECS) as a less invasive treatment option to locally remove gastric tumors without requiring extensive surgery in these frail patients. LECS is a minimally invasive surgical technique where the tumor margin is first marked from the inside with a gastroscope, followed by surgical removal of the lesion under endoscopic guidance.
This is a prospective, single-center, open, single-arm clinical study to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of Fruquintinib combined with TAS102 for second-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer.
This is a prospective, single-center, open, single-arm clinical study to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of Fruquintinib and Adebrelimab combined with paclitaxel/albumin paclitaxel for second-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer.
This is a prospective, single-center, open, single-arm clinical study to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of Fruquintinib and Adebrelimab combined with paclitaxel/albumin paclitaxel for second-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer.
This is a phase 2 pragmatic study that evaluates the clinical benefit of continuing systemic therapy with the addition of locally ablative therapies for oligo-progressive solid tumors as the primary objective. The primary outcome measure is the time to treatment failure (defined as time to change in systemic failure or permanent discontinuation of therapy) following locally ablative therapy.
The study is a real-world observational clinical study. Patients diagnosed as gastric cancer through histopathology were screened and enrolled. Before anti-tumor treatment, gastroscopy biopsy tissue specimens, surgical specimens, and malignant pleural effusion or ascites specimens, etc. are collected. The investigators will perform a drug sensitivity testing based on a novel drug susceptibility testing method to test the commonly used anti-tumor treatment regimens. Patients were given conventional anti-tumor treatment according to the medical judgment of the doctors. Finally, the investigator will evaluate the consistency of clinical efficacy in gastric cancer treatment and drug susceptibility outcomes.
Compare with the gastric cavity without cancerous transformation in atrophic gastritis, analyze the microbiota and metabolomics changes in intestinal type of gastric cancer under the background of atrophic gastritis, and explore the relevant mechanisms.
This is a single-arm, prospective, non-randomized, multi-center/single-center, open-label, phase I clinical study aimed at evaluating the efficacy and safety of Disitamab Vedotin in combination with PD-1 as posterior line treatment for patients with advanced HER2-low expressing gastric cancer.
In this study, we will prospectively recruit 100,000 individuals, including gastric cancer patients who have not undergone any anti-tumor treatment and non-gastric cancer participants. We will construct a diagnostic model for malignant tumors based on the combination of tongue imaging, tongue coating, saliva, and fecal multi-omics data (including metagenomics, proteomics, metabolomics, etc.). Additionally, it will explore the relationship between oral and intestinal microbiota and the development of malignant tumors.
The purpose of this SMOG 01 study is to observe the possibility of intraperitoneal dissemination of tumor cells throughout the entire laparoscopic (robotic) radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer and explore its related mechanisms and potential clinical significance with peritoneal metastasis.