View clinical trials related to Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma.
Filter by:This study is going to test the ability to successfully obtain results from certain personalized tests for patients with biliary tract cancers that are able to be surgically removed. Through surveys, this study will also evaluate the usefulness of these tests to medical oncologists as they make decisions on what standard or experimental treatments might benefit the patient's enrolled in the study. The study is observational and does not require any change in the standard approach to treating biliary tract cancer. Results of the personalized tests will be provided to the treating medical oncologist and the medical oncologist can choose to whether or not to change management based on these results. These personalized tests include reading of the cancer DNA, testing whether a panel of drugs can kill a patient's cancer cells in a test tube, and testing for small amounts of cancer DNA in the blood as a way to check for the presence of leftover cancer in the body after it is removed surgically. This study will also give extra pieces of cancer, that would otherwise be discarded, from surgery for laboratory research into how biliary tract cancers respond to drugs and the body's immune system. The investigators hypothesize that the drug screen test will, in some cases, be useful to the medical oncologist and may lead to the use of cancer drugs that would not otherwise have been chosen based on standard guidelines or based on cancer DNA testing. The investigators hypothesize that the test tube drug screening method will correlate with how the cancer responds to the drugs in real life for those patients that end up receiving a drug that was included in the drug screen panel. The investigators hypothesize that monitoring of cancer DNA in the blood stream will help us predict which patients are most likely to have their cancer return after surgery. The investigators also hypothesize that in many cases the appearance of cancer DNA in the blood stream will happen weeks to months prior to the cancer showing up on usual body imaging or other lab tests. Finally, the investigators hypothesize that, for patients undergoing medical treatment for their cancer, trends in the amount of cancer DNA in the blood stream will correlate with the effectiveness of treatment.
The study will investigate whether liver transplantation provides increased survival, low side effects and good quality of life in patients with bile duct cancer where the tumor cannot be removed by normal surgery. Analyzes of blood and tissue samples from the tumor will be investigated to see if the analyzes can indicate who may have recurrence of the disease after liver transplantation. Furthermore, the effect of chemotherapy on normal liver and tumor tissues in the liver that are removed during transplantation will be investigated..
1. Phase of Development: II 2. Patient Population: Resectable Oncologically High-Risk Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma 3. Estimated Number of Patients: 34 patients 4. Primary Objective: To assess the resetability of neoadjuvant chemotherapy including gemcitabine, cisplatin, and nab-paclitaxel for resectable oncologically high-risk intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma that is treated with surgical resection. Thus, the primary aim is to increase R0 resection rate via completion of all treatment 5. Secondary Objectives: 1) To assess the radiological response rate according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) 2) To determine the overall resection rate 3) To determine recurrence-free survival (RFS) 4) To identify patients' overall survival (OS) rate. 5) Saftey and tolerability 6.Exploratory Endpoint : QoL analysis via EORTC QLO C-30
This is a Phase 1/2, open-label, FIH study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PDy), and antineoplastic activity of RLY-4008, a potent and highly selective FGFR2 inhibitor, in patients with unresectable or metastatic cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) and other solid tumors. The study consists of 3 parts: a dose escalation (Part 1), a dose expansion (Part 2), and an extension (Part 3).
The Duke HAI program was implemented in November 2018 and treated 30 patients in its first 17 months using the Medtronic Synchromed II device (only commercially available device suitable for HAI for cancer patients). The Duke HAI program has demonstrated safety of HAI with an overall complication rate was 19%, similar to prior published data, with all but one complication (extrahepatic perfusion) salvaged. The Investigator has also demonstrated feasibility and efficacy of a new HAI program, with 95% of patients initiating therapy with promising hepatic response and disease control rates. This protocol will enable the team to continue this program. All eligible patients will receive the synchromed II pump with a Codman catheter and chemotherapy including FUDR, dexamethasone and heparin. Systemic chemotherapy will be given per standard of care.
This is a single-arm, open-label, multi-center Phase II clinical trial intended to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of famitinib malate in treating iCCA(Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma ) patients with FGFR2 genetic aberrations who failed first-line therapy.
This is a single arm, open-label, non-randomized and single-center phase II clinical study, to evaluate the safety, tolerance, and efficacy of Camrelizumab in combination with Apatinib in patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC).
The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cryoablation combined with anti-pd-1 antibody in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma after progression on first line systemic therapy.
SHR-1210 is a humanized anti-PD-1 Immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4) monoclonal antibody. This is an open- label,single center,non-randomized ,single arm exploratory study . This clinical study is an investigator-initiated clinical trial(IIT) .The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of therapy with anti-PD-1 antibody SHR-1210 plus Capecitabine in patients with Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma After Surgery.
A multicenter Phase II, randomized, prospective, open-label Trial investigating the clinical impact on combining Specific Internal Radiotherapy (SIRT) with the PD1-L Inhibitor Durvalumab and the CTLA-4 Inhibitor Tremelimumab in patients with intrahepatic Biliary Tract Cancer