View clinical trials related to Hemangioendothelioma.
Filter by:Infantile hepatic hemangioendothelioma (IHHE) is an infantile hemangioma involving the liver.Since 2008, propranolol has been used for the treatment of hemangioma, and some researchers have also started to report the use of propranolol for the treatment of infantile hepatic hemangioma in children. Sirolimus can be used in patients with vascular malformations such as hemangiomas. IHHE is also an infantile hemangioma involving the liver,thus sirolimus may paly the role in treatment of IHHE.The clinical trial explores the efficacy of sequential treatment of sirolimus to refractory IHHE patients resistant with propranolol, to improve the therapeutic effect, reduce the side effects of traditional treatment methods (hormones, interferon), and reduce the number of operations and interventions and to provide a clinical basis for the application of the new therapeutics model of IHHE of "propranolol + sequential sirolimus treatment".
to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Low-dose sirolimus in Kaposiform Hemangioendothelioma in Chinese children by a prospective, randomized open trial.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of topical application of tacrolimus at different concentrations for superficial Kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (KHE) and tufted angioma (TA).
This is a biology driven, monocentric study, designed to identify biomarkers of activity of trabectedin in patients with advanced non-L soft-tissue sarcoma. The aim of this study is to implement high-throughput profiling technologies to identify predictive biomarkers of trabectedin efficacy through sequential tumor biopsies and blood sample collection in sarcoma patients.
This trial is a translational, open-label, multi-sites, prospective and retrospective cohort study of 500 patients aimed at clinical and biological characterization of sarcoma of rare subtype. 400 patients will be included in this prospective cohort study; they will be identified in the investigating centers in the context of either routine care or a clinical study protocol. Retrospective cases of patients (100 cases in total) will be identified in all centers through the GSF/GETO clinical databases already setted up (including the clinical base Conticabase).
Although hepatic tumors are uncommon in the perinatal period they are associated with significant morbidity and mortality in affected patients. The study is intended to evaluate the diagnostic efficiency of Protein Induced by Vitamin K Absence or antagonist-II(PIVKA-II) combining with alpha-fetoprotein in hepatic tumor of infant. This study is a multicenter study joined by several hospitals in China. Participants including hepatoblastoma, hepatic hemangioendothelioma and healthy control are consecutively recruited into the cohort. All the serum samples are collected before and after each treatment and will be tested in single center in order to decrease bias. Serum samples were tested for PIVKA-II, alpha-fetoprotein and biochemical indexes including alanine aminotransferase(ALT), aspartate aminotransferase(AST), gamma-glutamyl transferase(GGT), alpha-l-fucosidase(AFU), etc.
This research study is studying a drug as a possible treatment for Angiosarcoma or Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (EHE). -The drug involved in this study is Eribulin
Kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (KHE) is a rare vascular neoplasm that occurs predominantly in infancy or early childhood. KHE has a nearly equal sex ratio. The annual incidence of KHE has been estimated at 0.071 per 100,000 children. KHE presents with intermediate-malignant and locally aggressive characteristics but without distant metastases. This pilot trial studies sirolimus versus sirolimus plus pednisolone in treating patients diagnosed with kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (KHE) and Kasabach-Merritt phenomemon (KMP) that cannot be removed by surgery. The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of orally administered sirolimus versus sirolimus plus pednisolone in the treatment of KHE associated with KMP.
This phase II trial studies how well trametinib works in treating patients with epithelioid hemangioendothelioma that has spread to other places in the body (metastatic), nearby tissue or lymph nodes (locally advanced), or cannot be removed by surgery (unresectable). Trametinib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.
The study will use blood (serum and plasma) and tissue obtained from participants undergoing prescribed surgical resection of vascular anomalies of interest proposed in this study. The study will also use blood (serum and plasma) and tissue collected and stored in a tissue bank maintained by the Department of Hematology/Oncology.