View clinical trials related to Liver Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is a single-arm, open-label, multi-center early phase II study. This proof of concept study will investigate whether the combined use of local tumor ablation/radiation plus immunomodulating drugs may induce a significant immune response in patient with incurable liver metastases from colorectal cancer (CRC) (+/- limited extrahepatic disease) being stable or in partial remission after completion of 4-6 months first line systemic therapy. The primary objective of the study is to show an overall response rate of lesions not treated by ablation/radiotherapy including the extrahepatic lesions (according to iRECIST criteria) higher than 10%. With the continuation of first line systemic treatment, no further responses are expected. Secondary objectives are: - To establish the feasibility and safety of the combined treatment modalities; - To study the impact of the local technique (RFA/Radiotherapy) on the results; - To investigate biomarkers to predict response to the combined treatment
This an open-label,Non-Randominzed Phase 2 study to evaluate the Safety and Tolerability of SHR-1210 in combination with Apatinib or chemotherapy (FOLFOX4 or GEMOX regimen) in subjects with Advanced PLC.or BTC Participants with advanced PLC who failed or intolerable to prior systemic therapy will be treated with SHR-1210 plus Apatinib; Participants with advanced PLC or BTC who have never received prior systemic therapy will be treated with SHR-1210 plus FOLFOX4 or GEMOX regimen.
The primary objective is to prove non-inferiority of thermal ablation compared to hepatic resection in patients with at least one resectable and ablatable colorectal liver metastases (≤3cm) and no extrahepatic disease.
Liver cancer including primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and metastatic liver cancers is one the most common malignancies in the world. Over 10000 new cases per year are diagnosed in Taiwan. Despite the many treatment options, the prognosis of HCC remains dismal. More than 8000 people died of this cancer every year in Taiwan. A majority (70% to 85%) of patients present with advanced or unresectable disease. In contrast, small liver cancers can be cured with an appreciable frequency. Five-year disease-free survival exceeding 50% has been reported for surgical resection, and for the inoperable patients who do not have vascular invasion or extrahepatic spread. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is recommended as an alternative curative therapy. However, the main drawback of RFA is its limitation to tumor size and location. The tumors larger than 5 cm in diameter or located adjacent to vessels, could not be ablated completely sometimes. Microwave ablation (MWA) can ablate tumor by higher temperature than RFA, so is supposed not to be diminished by adjacent vessels.
This phase III, randomized, prospective clinical study, aiming to compare the analgesic effects of celecoxib, parecoxib, and oxycodone in patients with inoperable hepatic carcinoma undergoing TACE procedure in postoperative pain control.
Ultrasound-guided percutaneous MWA of liver cancer is a relatively new technique with favorable long-term outcomes.Butthe results are mainly from single center reports.A larger scale data need to be analyzed to evaluate the technique. This study is designed to investigated the efficacy of cooled-tip microwave ablation (MWA) for primary liver cancer (PLC) and analyzed the prognostic factors on a multicenter database.Between January 2013 and December 2018, all the PLC patients underwent ultrasound-guided percutaneous cooled-tip MWA as a primary treatment will be enrolled from at least ten Chinese institutions with different levels of MWA experience. All the patients will be closely followed up until June 2019. Clinicopathologic data, recurrence and survival estimates, complications and prognosis-relative factors will be measured.
The PI is studying if sorafenib/hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) will have improved efficacy when compared to sorafenib alone and in patients progressing of sorafenib the addition of HCQ would lead to disease stability in patients with advanced hepatocellular cancer (HCC).
Estimation of the concordance of Tc 99m localization in liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma using SPECT/CT imaging and abdominal FDG (PET)/CT imaging per subject.
This clinical trial studies the side effects and best way to perform yttrium Y-90 radioembolization in treating patients with liver cancer that has spread to other places in the body (metastatic). Yttrium Y-90 radioembolization is a therapy that injects radioactive microspheres directly into an artery that feeds liver tumors to cut off their blood supply. Performing yttrium Y-90 radioembolization in a single session may make treatment faster, minimize patient travel, and decrease the overall cost of the procedure.
This phase II trial is studying how well giving oxaliplatin and capecitabine together works in treating patients with liver cancer.