View clinical trials related to Liver Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is a prospective, one-arm, phase II clinical study of intravenous mFOLFOX6 plus Camrelizumab combined with apatinib for CNLC stage III hepatocellular carcinoma
This is an open-label, nonrandomized investigator-initiated clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of IBR900 cell injection in combination with Lenvatinib or bevacizumab in subjects with advanced primary liver cancer.
Evaluation of tislellimab combined with XELOX and bevacizumab or tislelizumab combined with FOLFOX and cetuximab regimen in patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer Rate and R0 resection rate and safety.
Fruquintinib (HMPL-013) is a novel oral small molecule that selectively inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR) 1, 2, and 3 and has demonstrated potent inhibitory effects on multiple human tumor xenografts. Combined with hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC), this study is conducted to assess the efficacy and safety of this regimen in patients with unresectable colorectal cancer liver metastases as the third-line therapy.
The patients with non-resectable colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) have always being considered a particular subgroup of CRLM in which the therapeutic approach, is focused on strategies that allow a potential surgery like neoadjuvant systemic treatments. But, the underlying biology that causes this particular profile of spread in a proportion of patients that always recur and progress in the liver has not been properly characterized from a biological point of view. Unfortunately, these patients finally develop liver metastasis not amenable for local treatments and become refractory to systemic treatments even without developing extrahepatic liver metastases. As a result, liver transplantation (LT) is a potential for patients without extrahepatic involvement and nonresectable CRLM. There are several studies that aims to evaluate if LT increases overall survival compared to best alternative care. To our knowledge, none of these studies incorporate objectives focused on the underlying tumor biology of this particular population and the development of focused strategies including a dynamic disease monitoring and targeted treatments for this particular population.The METLIVER trial will permit to expand the genetic studies to the whole complexity of metastatic lesions and a more precise evaluation of their genetic heterogeneity. Moreover, it will help to precise the type of genetic analyses on liquid biopsies that can be designed for patients that will unfortunately relapse mostly with lung metastases after LT. Our proposal will maximize the opportunity to produce an unprecedented knowledge on CRLM evolution and will provide new opportunities for relapsed patients.
To learn if piflufolastat F18 can be used in imaging scans for patients with breast cancer, HCC, or pancreatic cancer
This study is to evaluate whether intraoperative fluorescence imaging using fluorescent-labeled IgG probe (FluoAB) can help distinguish the tumor and the liver cirrhosis (or the liver parenchyma). The main purposes of this study include: - To validate the safety and effectiveness of using FluoAB in hepatic surgery. - To raise the surgical precision with guidance by FluoAB fluorescence imaging.
To observe and explore the effect of anti-angiogenesis combined with PD-1/PD-L1 therapy in the real world on the survival prognosis of patients with advanced liver cancer, and to summarize the treatment experience of a wide range of people.
This is a first-in-human, Phase 1 open-label, multicenter, dose escalation, safety, pharmacodynamic, and PK study of exoASO-STAT6 (CDK-004) in patients with advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) and patients with liver metastases from either primary gastric cancer or colorectal cancer (CRC).
Liver cancer is one of the most common malignant tumors worldwide with high morbidity and mortality, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the main histological subtype. So far, liver resection is the most effective treatment but the postoperative recurrence rate is high at five years, and the prognosis is difficult to estimate. Microvascular invasion (MVI) and postoperative minimal residual disease (MRD) are crucial prognostic factors for patients undergoing hepatectomy. Although many laboratory and imaging methods have been established to estimate the recurrence risk, their stability and accuracy are still not high. To date, no unified conclusion is achieved. It's eagerly to screen out a batch of individualized staging and prognosis-related biological indicators for early warning and prediction of prognosis, having good stability and high precision. Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) molecular detection technology is an emerging detection technology of tumor gene profiling in recent years, which can be used to predict and monitor tumor recurrence. In this study, by detecting genomic chromosomal abnormalities in plasma and tumor tissues of patients before and after surgery, the investigators hope to construct a preoperative MVI prediction model and a postoperative MRD monitoring model, so as to provide reference for the precise treatment of HCC.