View clinical trials related to Liver Neoplasms.
Filter by:High Frequency Jet Ventilation (HFJV) can be used in liver tumour ablation to minimise breathing related movements. The jet cannula is placed freely inside an endotracheal tube (ETT) and the outflow of air is passive, moving out in the interspace between the jet cannula and the inner walls of the ETT. This study aims to investigate whether the tube size can influence the washout of carbon dioxide using two different sizes of ETT's.
All patients who met the inclusion criteria were randomly divided into four groups, 30 cases in each group, which were lidocaine group 1, lidocaine group 1.5, lidocaine group 2, and the placebo group In lidocaine group 1, lidocaine group 1.5, and lidocaine group 2, 1% lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg was intravenously infused with a micropump after anesthesia induction, and the infusion was completed within 10 minutes according to the ideal body weight, and then continued for 1% lidocaine was infused at 1 mg/kg.h, 1.5 mg/kg.h and 2 mg/kg.h respectively until the end of the operation. In the placebo group, the same volume of normal saline was used instead.
Comparison of the progression-free survival, overall survival, local progression rates, complete ablation rates and the complications rate of MSA and traditional MWA in the treatment of single hepatocellular carcinoma with a diameter of ≤5cm.
Studies have demonstrated that the rate of change in stroke volume variation (SVV) can be used to determine the volume of body fluids during major abdominal surgery. Anaesthesiologists can use SVV as a guide for the appropriate administration of intraoperative fluids to improve postoperative prognoses. Liver surgery is a major abdominal operation, and the amount of blood lost is typically higher than that during other general abdominal surgeries. Blood loss is positively correlated with the intraoperative fluid infusion volume, and greater blood loss is associated with more postoperative complications. Additionally, comorbid liver disease or cirrhosis can increase the complexity of liver tumour resection, causing difficulty in assessing intravascular volume and determining the appropriate intraoperative infusion volume.
Due to different etiologies, diagnosis and treatment of HCC in China is different from that in Western countries.US is an important screening method for HCC in patients with liver cirrhosis. CEUS, as an enhanced imaging method based on US, has the advantages of convenience, non-radiation, low cost, short examination time, and the diagnostic performance of HCC is comparable to that of CECT, CEMRI, and hepatobiliary-specific MRI. It is of great significance to consider the cost-effectiveness of each examination based on the principle of cost minimization. Therefore, we propose immediate CEUS examination for suspicious lesions ≤2 cm screened by US, and determine the diagnostic process of further diagnostic methods based on the CEUS results. The aim of this study is to establish a screening and diagnosis process for HCC ≤2 cm suitable for China considering time effect, economic effect and diagnostic efficiency.
Establishment and validation of the deep learning signature of bevacizumab efficacy in initially unresectable CRLM patients
This study has two purposes. One is to conduct a phase IV biomarker validation study in which the investigators will prospectively survey a cohort of patients at risk for liver cancer using semi-annual abdominal ultrasound and GALAD Score for 5 years. The GALAD score is a serum biomarker-based panel that can aid in early detection among patients with a high risk for liver cancer. One is to establish a bio-repository of longitudinally collected bio-specimens from patients with fibrosis/cirrhosis as a reference set for future research.
By tracking the short-term and long-term results of patients after hepatectomy, the difference of short-term results between patients with sarcopenia and patients without sarcopenia was analyzed, and the correlation between sarcopenia and short-term and long-term results of patients after hepatectomy was explored, so as to improve people's awareness of sarcopenia and pay attention to its prevention and treatment.
Liver metastases are one of the most common sites of metastasis in advanced gastric cancer. Chemotherapy remains the mainstay of treatment for these patients, but combination chemotherapy has encountered a bottleneck in improving patient survival, with no significant improvement in survival rates at 1, 3 or 5 years. In a previous phase II clinical study we not only observed the survival benefits of Tislelizumab in the treatment of GI tumors such as liver, oesophageal and some gastric cancers, but also confirmed the safety of Tislelizumab in the treatment of advanced GI tumors. This study is a clinical study of PD-1 monoclonal antibody (Tislelizumab) in combination with SOX (Tegafur + Oxaliplatin) for the treatment of liver metastases from gastric cancer. It aims to further explore a new combination therapy for liver metastases from gastric cancer, which is safe and effective for patients with difficult-to-treat disease.
We are performing a pilot and feasibility randomized controlled trial (RCT) of HCC screening by US + AFP every 6 months (n=100), the current standard-of-care, versus aMRI + AFP every 6 months (n=100) for 12 months (i.e. at time 0, 6 and 12 months) among AI/AN patients with cirrhosis or HBV.