View clinical trials related to Liver Cancer.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to compare radiation treatment plans that are designed for patients with liver cancer. One treatment plan will be created using routine procedures and scans normally performed for radiation treatment planning. The other treatment plan will be created using routine procedures with the addition of two imaging scans; a HIDA (Hepatobiliary Iminodiacetic Acid) scan and an MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scan. This study will evaluate if adding these imaging scans to treatment planning can reduce the amount of radiation to healthy liver tissue during treatment.
Introduction:The drug-eluting beads transarterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE) is introduced to better improve efficacy and reduce the systemic toxicity in liver cancer patients on account of its higher intratumoral chemotherapeutic drug concentration and reduced drug infiltration into systemic circulation. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy, safety and prognostic factors of DEB-TACE treatment in Chinese patients with liver cancer. Hypothesis:DEB-TACE illustrates a better treatment response, progression free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS) and less common adverse events (AEs) in liver cancer patients. Objective: to investigate the efficacy, safety and prognostic factors of DEB-TACE treatment in Chinese patients with liver cancer.
Selective Internal Radiation Therapy (SIRT), also known as radioembolisation, is a minimal invasive, endovascular treatment for primary and secondary liver tumours. In France, SIR-Spheres are listed as reimbursable by the national health authorities (Haute Autorité de Santé [HAS]). In order to evaluate the reimbursement after five years, all patients treated with SIR-Spheres will be entered into a registry that collects data on the real-life clinical application of SIRT and reports to the national authorities.
Mechanical ventilation can be used to impose a completely regular pattern of breathing frequency and inflation volume on the patient for as long as required. This would considerably improve the reproducibility of the internal motion parameters, and thus facilitate the implementation of respiratory-synchronized techniques such as gating, tracking and four-digital optimization.
Non-anatomical liver resection with appropriate resection margin was regarded as a potential curative treatment for selected major hepatic carcinoma due to preserving maximal normal liver, especially in cirrhotic patients. But occurrence of cutting surface related complications become a main challenge.
This observational clinical cohort study aims to evaluate the clinical utility of LiverMultiScan in quantifying liver health prior to liver resection or TACE. The results will enable further developments in scanning protocols and software, and clearly define the relevance of applying this technology as part of the pre-operative assessment of the patient being considered for liver resection or TACE.
Phase 1 A: First-in-human phase 1 study to determine safety of NP-G2-044 when given orally on a daily X 28 days followed by a 14 day rest period.
In this study, effects of γδT cells on human Liver Cancer in combination with tumor reducing surgery, for example, cryosurgery going to be investigated.
Combined hepatocellular and mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma (cHCC-MFCCC) is a rare tumor. The aim of this study was the analysis of the outcome comparing such tumor with classic hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma (MFCCC).
For patients with colorectal liver metastasis (CLM), the prospect of long-term survival relies on liver resection. Wistfully, more than 75 % of patients with CLM are initially unresectable, due to an insufficient future liver remnant (FLR) volume In order to increase FLR volume, most patients will first receive chemotherapy to reduce the tumor load (downsizing). When chemotherapy is insufficient to provide an adequate postoperative FLR, portal vein embolization (PVE) can be performed. About 50-70 % of patients undergoing PVE obtain a sufficient liver hypertrophy to allow liver resection. While PVE is recognised for its efficacy to induce liver hypertrophy, some studies expressed substantial concerns regarding the potential adverse effect of this intervention on pre-resection tumor progression, increased risk of cancer recurrence following resection and reduced overall survival following resection Those studies suggested that the need to perform PVE should be assessed thoroughly for each patient and that chemotherapy should be maintained during the whole hypertrophy process in order to contain the potential adverse effect of PVE on tumor progression. Other studies found no significant association between PVE and negative oncological outcomes. As mentioned in almost every study cited above, more data is needed to provide a clearer vision regarding the impact of PVE on tumor progression and cancer recurrence following liver resection. The aim of this study is to compare the overall and disease-free survival of PVE-requiring patients to the ones who underwent upfront surgery (NoPVE). As a secondary objective, the impact of several covariates (related to surgery, patient's condition and disease stage) on survival and cancer recurrence will be tested. Our hypothesis are that 1) PVE might be associated with a lower overall survival and a higher risk of cancer recurrence in univariate analysis but 2) this association will not remain significant when other covariates are included in the proportional COX hazard models.