View clinical trials related to Metastatic Colorectal Cancer.
Filter by:The primary objective of the two phase PERMAD trial is the evaluation of the impact of a personalized marker-driven treatment approach with early detection of progression and modification of treatment on cytokines and angiogenic factors (CAF) and efficacy. In regard of the two parts, the primary objective of the run-in phase (n=50 patients) with conventional switch of chemotherapy together with the anti-angiogenic agent is the determination of a distinct cytokines and angiogenic factor (CAF) profile during treatment with FOLFOX and bevacizumab, which allows early detection/prediction of progressive disease. The primary objective of the marker-driven randomized part (n=150 patients) with marker-driven switch of antiangiogenic agent and maintenance of chemotherapy is the evaluation of the efficacy of an early marker-driven switch of anti-angiogenic treatment (bevacizumab to aflibercept) This is a multicentre, multinational, open labeled, prospective, randomized, controlled phase II study designed to assess the clinical utility of an early marker driven change of anti-angiogenic treatment (bevacizumab to aflibercept) maintaining the chemotherapy backbone until definite radiological progression in first line treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. After completing the run in phase of the study, with at least 30 patients completing their first line treatment (due to progression, secondary resection or toxicity) and being evaluable for CAF analyses, the results will be reviewed by an Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC). Based on that review the decision to continue with, modify or cancel the randomized part will be made. The primary endpoint of the run-in phase with conventional switch of chemotherapy together with the anti-angiogenic agent is: • Progression free survival (PFS1) of first line treatment The primary endpoint of the randomized part with marker-driven switch of antiangiogenic agent and maintenance of chemotherapy is: • Progression free survival rate at 6 months (PFSR@6) after first cycle after randomization.
The study will shed additional light on the impact of Vectibix® under the current, standard clinical conditions of mCRC treatment in Greece. It will provide data on the duration and the outcomes of Vectibix® treatment in real-life setting.
This is a largest cohort study aimed to estimate the overall survival of patients been treated with regorafenib for metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) within the frame of a french compassionate program.
The purpose of this clinical study is to assess the safety and tolerability and efficacy of active immunotherapy with dose escalation and cohort expansion of OBI-833 in advanced/metastatic gastric, lung, colorectal, or breast cancer subjects.
Phase I/II, Open-labeled, Prospective, Multi-center study of a Pretargeted Radioimmunotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer with ractionated injections of TF2 plus 90Y-IMP288 (RITCOLON).
This is a multicentric, phase II single-arm study in which KRAS, NRAS and BRAF wild-type, irinotecan-resistant metastatic colorectal cancer patients progressing after an initial response to a first-line cetuximab-containing therapy, receive a rechallenge third-line treatment with cetuximab plus irinotecan.
This is a phase II randomized study of 4-months induction first-line chemotherapy with FOLFOXIRI + cetuximab followed by maintenance with cetuximab or bevacizumab in patients affected by KRAS wild type (wt) mCRC.
Patients are routinely asked to sign an "informed consent" document prior to starting chemotherapy, indicating they understand the risks and benefits of treatment. Although this could be a strategic moment to equip patients with information they need to make truly informed medical decisions, many patients and caregivers note that these conversations are less useful than they could be. The informed consent process and its associated documents suffer several limitations: 1) risks are emphasized over benefits; 2) educational materials focus on individual drugs instead of regimens; 3) information is presented in written instead of alternative written/audiovisual format; and 4) the patient perspective is lacking. The overarching objective of this project is to develop a library of communication tools for the most common chemotherapy regimens used to treat advanced gastrointestinal cancers. Tools will include video clips and written documents that can be readily distributed, modified, and customized. This toolkit will be crafted in collaboration with oncologists and patients living with gastrointestinal cancer and improves upon existing resources in several ways: 1) balanced discussion of benefits as well as risks, 2) focus on regimens rather than drugs, 3) use of both written and video format, and 4) inclusion of the patient perspective (e.g. video clips of patients describing their experience). A panel of oncologist and patient stakeholders will evaluate the acceptability of the tools. The investigators will then conduct a randomized clinical trial to demonstrate if the informed consent toolkit improves the quality of informed consent for palliative chemotherapy. If effective, the tools will be amenable to broad dissemination via patient accessible cancer education websites and oncology clinics.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and anti-tumor activity of the triple combination of WNT974, LGX818 and cetuximab in BRAFV600-mutant mCRC with RNF43 mutations or RSPO fusions. The design of this study is based upon the translational and pre-clinical data that suggest that Wnt pathway signals, increased due to RNF43 mutations or RSPO fusions, cooperate with the EGFR and BRAF signals to maintain the growth of BRAFV600 CRCs. Inhibition of these signals with the triple combination of WNT974, LGX818 and cetuximab may result in anti-tumor activity.
This study consist of 4-months induction first-line chemotherapy with the G.O.N.O. FOLFOXIRI regimen plus bevacizumab followed by maintenance with bevacizumab or bevacizumab plus metronomic chemotherapy (with capecitabine and cyclophosphamide) in mCRC patients. The main objective of this study is to preliminarily evaluate the potential effects of the combination of a metronomic chemotherapy with capecitabine and cyclophosphamide to maintenance bevacizumab on pharmacodynamic and clinical parameters among mCRC patients.