View clinical trials related to Metastatic Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:Metastatic colorectal cancer is one of the common malignant tumors and the overall prognosis is poor. The introduction of immune-checkpoint inhibition (ICI) has led to a paradigm shift in the treatment of patients with metastatic cancer. Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) delivers a large dose of radiation to the tumor target with high precision while sparing irradiation of the surrounding normal tissues. It is suggested that SBRT could be the most appropriate radiotherapy modality to be combined with immunotherapy since it induces the expression of a series of cytokines and new tumour-associated antigens (TAAs) and is more likely to cause intense immune response and exert an abscopal effect than conventional radiotherapy. Thus, this study is to explore the use of SBRT in combination with ICI in colorectal cancer patients with oligometastasis, in order to get better local and systemic tumor control and improve progress-free survival (PFS).
The incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer in China's cancer disease spectrum is on the rise, and it is a common malignant tumor that harms the health of Chinese residents.This study was a one-arm, single-center, open clinical study. A total of 50 patients were enrolled in the study.
A prospective, multicenter, randomized in a 2:1 ratio, controlled, clinical trial with two parallel arms will be conducted to compare irinotecan dose escalated FOLFIRI according to UGT1A1 genotyping plus 120 mg regorafenib with 120 mg regorafenib alone in previously treated patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC).
This research study is studying a combination of drugs as a possible treatment for metastatic colorectal cancer characterized by BRAF V600E mutation. The names of the study drugs involved in this study are: - Dabrafenib - Trametinib - PDR001
The study is an double blind, randomized, multicenter phase 3 trial. The efficacy analyses are based on 570 Chinese patients with RAS wt mCRC treated with mFOLFOX-6 ± cetuximab. Study treatment continues until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity (ie, not for a fixed number of courses). The primary endpoint of the study is progression-free survival (PFS) time according to RECIST 1.0; key secondary endpoints include overall survival (OS) time, overall response rate (ORR), and safety/tolerability.
This is a phase II, open label, multicenter study. Patients with advanced colon rectal cancer (CRC) harboring an amplified HER2 that have been previously treated and progressed with an aNti-HER2 treatment, will be treated with the anti HER2 antibody conjugate trastuzumab emtansine (TDM1). Patients will receive study medication until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, withdrawal of consent or death. Main objective of the study is the evaluation of objective response rate according to RECIST 1.1 criteria. Disease control rate, defined as the sum of complete, partial and stable disease patients over total patient, followed by response duration, time to progression and safety are secondary endpoints.
The study is designed as phase III, randomized, two armed, parallel, double blind (patient and assessor blinded), active controlled, and equivalency clinical trial with primary endpoint of Progression-Free Survival of Cetuximab® (produced by CinnaGen) compared with Erbitux® (Cetuximab, the reference drug) in patients with RAS wild-type Metastatic Colorectal Cancer with the allocation ratio of 2:1.Patients who met the following criteria could be recruited to receive the mentioned intervention randomly. Inclusion criteria: Male or female older than 18 years old, histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the colon or rectum which is metastatic, having one or more bi-dimensionally measurable lesions as defined by RECIST criteria, tumor that could not be resected for curative purposes,ECOG performance status score of 2 or less,life expectancy of longer than 3 months (clinical assessment),evidence of tumor EGFR expression (expanded wild-type RAS),adequate organ and marrow function as defined: ANC ≥ 1,500/mm3 Plt ≥ 100,000/mm3 Hb ≥ 9 g/dL (may have had blood transfusions) AST/ALT ≤ 2.5 IULN or ≤ 5 IULN with known liver metastases Total bilirubin ≤ 1.5 IULN Serum Creatinine ≤ 1.5 IULN INR ≤ 1.5 and PTT ≤ 1.5 IULN
This is an open-label, parallel designed study to assess the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of the single-dose and multi-dose of a recombinant anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody (CPGJ602) in patients with at least one prior chemical regimen failed metastatic colorectal cancer. The immunogenicity and preliminary efficacy of CPGJ602 will also be assessed. The study includes 3 parts: part 1: after a single dose of CPGJ602 or cetuximab (the active comparator), the patients will be observed for 4 weeks; part 2: CPGJ602 or cetuximab will be administered to the patients once a week for 5 weeks; part 3: CPGJ602 will be administered to the patients once a week until the patient's death or the withdrawal decision of the patient and/or investigator.
The goal of delivering the right drug to the right cancer patient (precision medicine) requires a detailed understanding of how genomic alterations are linked to drug response. The purpose of this study is to intercept at point-of-care a large cohort of newly diagnosed mCRC patients to determine if it is possible to obtain personalized genetic information from each subject's tumor (tissue and blood) to triage treatment choices. In case of target positivity, patients will be conveyed, whenever possible, to self-standing, independent, hypothesis-driven POC trials as soon as they exhibit resistance to standard of care treatment.
Resection of liver metastasis is potentially curative in patients with colorectal cancer bearing liver metastasis. However, early recurrence occurs in up to 30% in 3 months after liver resection. To optimize patient selection, the investigators propose to evaluate the the value of incorporating circulating tumor cells enumeration to clinical factors in a prospective study