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Lymph Node Metastasis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Lymph Node Metastasis.

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NCT ID: NCT05336643 Not yet recruiting - Rectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Radioisotope and Fluorescence Guidance in Rectal Cancer

Start date: January 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A study to investigate if pelvic side wall lymph nodes that remain after neo-adjuvant chemoradiotherapy can be identified intraoperatively using dual radioisotope and fluorescence guidance.

NCT ID: NCT05246319 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Neuroendocrine Tumors

Preoperative Imaging in Patients With Small Bowel Neuroendocrine Tumors

TEGRELE
Start date: January 1, 2012
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Digestive NETs are the second most common malignant digestive tumor after adenocarcinoma. The most common gastrointestinal NETs arise from the small intestine. These tumors have a high lymph node and distant metastatic potential (hepatic, pulmonary, etc.). Their management is essentially surgical and the extent of the resection essentially depends on preoperative data from conventional and isotopic imaging. The goal of surgical resection is to remove the portion of the small intestine carrying the tumour(s) with healthy margins (so-called R0 resection) and affected lymph nodes in the mesentery (lymph node dissection). The extent of lymph node dissection, sometimes significant, exposes you to the risk of short hail with its own complications (malnutrition, diarrhoea, etc.). Consequently, an analysis of the benefits and risks between the interest of an extensive and oncological resection (R0) and the risks of short bowel must be carried out for each patient. The reference examination to define lymph node involvement is determined by the histological examination of the resected surgical specimen (reference examination). The preoperative evaluation of lymph node extension is done by preoperative abdominal CT scan. However, the preoperative CT scan is not always consistent (sensitivity and specificity) with the pathology data (reference examination). For about 5 years, isotopic imaging (DOPA-PET and DOTATOC) has become feasible and could improve the quality of preoperative evaluation of lymph node extension. Consequently, the aim of this study is to determine the contribution of isotopic imaging (DOPA-PET and DOTATOC) in the preoperative evaluation of lymph node extension.

NCT ID: NCT05132283 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Lymph Node Metastasis

Urologic Lymphadenectomy in AMIGO

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research study involves the use of two navigation systems, the 3D Slicer-based navigation system, and the Siemens Monaco systems, to simplify the complexity of image-guided lymphadenectomy procedures (surgery to remove one or more lymph nodes) in patients with urological cancer.

NCT ID: NCT04233476 Completed - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

99mTc-3PRGD2 SPECT/CT for Integrin Imaging of Lung Cancer

TRIIL
Start date: October 12, 2019
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective, multicenter, self-controlled phase 3 clinical trial designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of an integrin αVβ3-targeted imaging, 99mTc-3PRGD2 SPECT/CT, for diagnosis of lung cancer and mapping the lymph node metastases. The pathological results will be considered as the gold standard and the conventional metabolic imaging by 18F-FDG PET/CT will be used for a head-to-head comparison. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of 99mTc-3PRGD2 SPECT/CT in mapping of lymph node metastasis according to the nodal mapping system released by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer in 2009 (IASLC-2009). The secondary objectives include evaluation of 99mTc-3PRGD2 SPECT/CT in detection of lung cancer and the safety of 99mTc-3PRGD2 injection in human beings.

NCT ID: NCT03588416 Recruiting - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Multicentric Study About Pathological Risk Factors for Lymph Node Metastasis in Malignant Colorectal Polyps

POST-1
Start date: March 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Colorectal cancer screening showed an increased incidence of malignant colorectal polyps pT1 after endoscopic excision. Their management is not yet standardized, for the presence of histological features increasing early lymph node involvement. The literature has proposed several histopathological criteria, for which the risk of lymph node metastasis can vary (6-20%), but final data are not yet available. Aim 1.To collect data about patients undergoing an endoscopic polypectomy with histologic finding of pT1, retrospectively and prospectively, dividing both databases into two groups, endoscopic group (EG) and surgical group (SG) Aim 2. To analyze retrospectively which pathological criteria can increase the risk of lymph node metastasis and to elaborate a prognostic score for lymph node metastatic risk Aim 3. To verify prospectively the prognostic score capacity on predicting lymph node metastasis Aim 4. To calculate the disease free survival, overall survival, local recurrence rate and distal recurrence rate and verify if there is a difference between EG and SG According to literature, the most important histopathological criteria to establish the high risk of lymph node metastasis are: 1. Lateral margin of healthy tissue (high risk: <1mm and piecemeal polypectomy) 2. Depth of submucosa invasion (high risk: >1000 μM or sm2-sm3 for sessile polyps; Haggitt level 4 for pedunculated polyps) 3. Vascular invasion (high risk: presence) 4. Lymphatic invasion (high risk: presence) 5. Tumor budding (high risk: presence) 6. Tumor differentiation (high risk: grade G3-G4 or mucinous) A database will be used by all participating centres for collecting clinical and pathological data. All the analyses will be centralized by the PI. Uni-multivariate analyses will be conducted at the end of data collection for retrospective arm and at 2 years of follow-up for prospective arm. Impact: This study aimed to investigate pathological risk factors for lymph node metastasis in pT1 colorectal polyps after endoscopic polypectomy; their accurate identification could lead to improve their management, avoiding useless complementary surgery. Results could change clinical practice and reduce health-related costs.

NCT ID: NCT03416803 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

A Study of Individualized Radiotherapy Based on a Prediction Model of Lymph Node Metastasis in Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Start date: February 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Objectives: 1. To further validate the predictive efficacy of our established microRNA prediction model of HCC lymph node metastasis. 2. To establish a precise therapeutic mode of prophylactic radiation therapy in high-risk patients with HCC with lymph node metastasis under the guidance of a microRNA prediction model.

NCT ID: NCT02704988 Completed - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Clinical Trial Comparing Carnoy's and GEWF Solutions

Start date: March 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Regional lymph node metastasis is a major determinant of local recurrence and overall survival rates in patients with colorectal cancer. Because of the poor prognosis associated with the presence of lymph node metastasis, stage III colorectal cancer patients should receive adjuvant treatment with chemo and / or radiation therapy according to the site of tumor. Several authors have investigated the use of revealing solutions for lymph node clearance in colorectal cancer. Most studies comparing conventional histopathological specimen examination to any lymph node clearing technique showed that the use of revealing solutions increases the mean number of lymph nodes harvested, usually in a statistically significant manner. It is still controversial the impact of the use of revealing solutions for upstaging of lymph node status and consequently for the indication for adjuvant therapy. Therefore will be conducted a randomized clinical trial to compares the performance of GEWF and Carnoy solutions for the histopathological examination of patients with colorectal cancer. The aim of this study is to determine the lymph node revealing solution with the best performance (increase in the mean number of lymph node harvested and lymph node upstaging) in patients with colorectal cancer.

NCT ID: NCT02142244 Recruiting - Melanoma Clinical Trials

Fluorescence Surgery for Sentinel Node Identification in Melanoma

Start date: May 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Sentinel node biopsy is a surgical procedure used to find melanoma lymph node metastasis (i.e. groin/axilla) in very early stages. This study aims to add a new technology over the standard procedure - a fluorescent contrast (indocyanine green) using special light (near infra-red) - looking for more precise diagnosis of the presence of the lymph node metastasis.

NCT ID: NCT00964977 Completed - Oral Cancer Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of Adjuvant Radiotherapy in Small Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Cancer and Single Lymph Node Metastasis.

Start date: October 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Radiotherapy with or without adjuvant chemotherapy represents an important column of modern therapy in advanced squamous cell originated tumours of the head and neck. However to date no studies are available which study the effectiveness of radiotherapy in patients with resected small tumours (T1, T2) and concomitant ipsilateral metastasis of a single lymph node (pN1) for general treatment recommendation. The present study is designed as non-blinded, prospective, multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) for comparison of overall-survival as primary clinical target in patients receiving radiation therapy vs. patients without adjuvant radiation following curative intended surgery. Aim of the study is to enroll 560 adult males and females for 1:1 randomization to one of the two treatment arms (radiation/non-radiation. Secondary clinical endpoints are as follows: Incidence and time to tumor relapse (locoregional relapse, lymph node involvement and metastatic spread), Quality of life as reported by EORTC (QLQ-C30 with H&N 35 module) and time from operation to orofacial rehabilitation.

NCT ID: NCT00794053 Completed - Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trials

The Usefulness of Staining Lymph Nodes During Operations for Cancer Thyroid in Detecting the Nodes That Have Cancer

Start date: December 2002
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Detection of lymph nodes starting to be involved by cancer spreading from the thyroid gland during operation is useful. It saves the patient from having a second operation to remove these nodes later on when they become obvious. The problem is that there are many lymph nodes around the gland. The theory is that only one node will get the first spill of the tumour cells. In this study the investigators are trying to use an inert colored material to inject into the tumour. This should run in the same path as the tumour cells and should therefore stain the one lymph node that will be affected first should the tumour spread. The stained lymph node is excised and examined instantaneously for tumour affection. If it is found to be affected by the tumour, then the operation is extended to include removal of all its fellow lymph nodes. If it is found to be free from the tumour, then this patient does not have tumour spread.