View clinical trials related to Metastatic Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether combination therapy of irinotecan with AZD1775 is safe and effective in treating mutated metastatic colorectal cancer patients.
The chemotherapy monitoring is currently based on radiological (RECIST 1.1 guideline) and clinical evaluation every 3 months. Circulating markers as Carcino Embryonic Antigen (CEA), circulating tumour DNA and total cell free DNA represent an alternative approach to evaluate the response. In the field of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) recent studies suggest that early evaluation could be clinically relevant. Indeed, early tumoral response seems to be correlated to overall survival. Moreover, post-operative morbidity increases with the number of prior chemotherapy treatments. Early evaluation could allow to modify chemotherapy regimens when response appears to be insufficient. The aim of the present study is to evaluate, in a prospective cohort of patients treated with systemic IV chemotherapy (5 Fluorouracil +/- oxaliplatin +/- irinotecan) +/- targeted therapy as first line treatment for a mCRC, the correlation between early variations of circulating tumour markers including CEA, circulating tumour DNA and total cell free DNA, and the 3 months objective response as defined in the RECIST 1.1 guideline.
The investigators do the clinical trial (patients with metastatic colorectal cancer treated with donafenib/placebo after failure of standard therapy) to assess efficacy and safety of donafenib in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, progressing after all approved standard therapies.
the efficacy and safety of BBI608 in combination with pembrolizumab
Determine whether nutritional support with high protein ONS in adult oncologic patients in the first step of cancer cachexia - asymptomatic precachexia, influence on the toxicity of systemic therapy.
The main purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability and to determine the recommended phase 2 dose of S 95005 given in combination with oxaliplatin in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer.
The primary aim of this french multicenter national study is to assess and compare time to quality of life score deterioration (targeted dimensions : global health, fatigue and emotional functionning of EORTC QLQC30 according to the first line chemotherapy associated with bevacizumab in metastatic colorectal patients.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of different dose-escalation approaches of regorafenib in mCRC patients.
The objective of this study is to optimize the search by next-generation sequencing (NGS) mutations in the KRAS, BRAF and NRAS on circulating tumor DNA and compare the genetic profiles obtained with those from tumors embedded in paraffin
Raltitrexed is a potent thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibitor. Conversely to 5-fluorouracil (5FU), raltitrexed can be administered safely in patients with cardiovascular disease, as well as in patients with dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase deficit. Since raltitrexed is administered in 15-minutes infusion, complications related to continuous infusion can be avoided, and it becomes a potential good candidate for locoregional treatments as hepatic intra-arterial or intra-peritoneal infusion. Despite these potential benefits over 5FU, clinical trials failed in their temptation to replace the 5FU in colorectal cancer patients, mainly due to raltitrexed toxicity at 3mg/m2 every 3 weeks. Oxaliplatin has demonstrated a synergic effect when combined with TS inhibitors, and its association with raltitrexed was evaluated at 130mg/m2 of oxaliplatin and 3mg/m2 of raltitrexed, every 3 weeks. Actually, one of the first-line standard regimens in metastatic colorectal cancer patients is the biweekly FOLFOX (85mg/m2 of oxaliplatin, and infusional 5FU) plus bevacizumab regimen, since a significant progression-free survival (PFS) benefit was observed over FOLFOX plus placebo. Biweekly administration of raltitrexed at 2mg/m2 demonstrated a favorable toxicity profile even in patients aged >65 years. Besides, the association of raltitrexed, oxaliplatin and bevacizumab seems safe. Then, the investigators decided to perform a randomized pharmacokinetic comparative study between biweekly TOMOX (raltitrexed 2 mg/m2 and oxaliplatin 85mg/m2) and triweekly TOMOX (raltitrexed 3 mg/m2 and oxaliplatin 130mg/m2) regimens in metastatic colorectal cancer patients, in a "ping-pong" crossover strategy to reduce the intra-individual variability. Bevacizumab was allowed at the dose of 5mg/kg or 7.5mg/kg, in biweekly and triweekly schedules, respectively. The secondary end-points were, objective response rate evaluated by RECIST 1.1 criteria, PFS, overall survival (OS), toxicity, and the comparison of toxicity between two arms for the first 2 cycles.