View clinical trials related to Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma.
Filter by:This single center, open-label, randomized controlled clinical trial was designed to investigate whether early nutritional intervention with oral nutrition supplements in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma undergoing chemoradiotherapy will improve nutritional status, quality of life and treatment tolerance.
To see the effect if a combination of neoadjuvant chemotherapy combined with Camrelizumab followed by chemoradiotherapy in treating patients without distant metastasis nasopharyngeal carcinoma
Through multicenter, open-label, randomised clinical trials, we intend to demonstrate that PD-1 treatment added to salvage surgery could further decrease the rate of disease progression and improve the survival outcome of patients with resectable locally recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma compared with those treated with salvage surgery alone.
The purpose of this study in to observe the effectiveness and safety of paclitaxel (albumin-bound type) combined with cisplatin, PD-1 inhibitor and IMRT in the treatment of locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
This trial is a prospective, parallel controlled, randomized, open, multi-center phase III clinical trial. The trial will enroll 364 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma who are staged T1-2N0-1M0 (except T1N0M0) (UICC 8th edition) . This experiment was participated by multiple centers of Nanjing Gulou Hospital, Jiangsu Provincial People's Hospital, Jiangsu Cancer Hospital, Nanjing Military Region General Hospital, Jiangsu Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and Zhongda Hospital. Each center competes for admission of cases. The subjects will be randomly assigned (using the random number table method according to the order of entry) to the experimental group to receive albumin-bound paclitaxel combined with IMRT concurrent radiotherapy, or the control group to receive cisplatin combined with IMRT concurrent radiotherapy.
Local control rates of nasopharyngeal carcinoma are increasing, but 15% of patients still have local recurrence within 5 years after initial treatment. Systematic treatment based on chemotherapy has become the mainstream approach for recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma which is intolerant to local therapy. we sought to find an efficient chemotherapy regimen with high tolerance according to the characteristics of chemotherapy drugs, that is, to explore the efficacy and safety of platinum plus 5-fluorouracil with continuous intravenous infusion at a low dose for a long term.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate its rationality in real-world data and provide clinical evidence for the refinement of nodal CTV delineation in nasopharyngeal carcinoma(NPC).
This is a multi-center, randomized, open-label, phase II study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of anti-PD-1 antibody Penpulimab (AK105) combined with chemotherapy ± anlotinib hydrochloride in the first-line treatment of patients with advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Primary treatment in nasopharynx cancers is radiotherapy (RT) or chemoradiotherapy (CRT) depending on the stage of the tumor. According to the guidelines, the dose of radiotherapy for primary tumors varies between 66-70 Gy. In consideration of modern radiotherapy techniques like IMRT with systemic chemotherapy for nasopharyngeal cancer, loco-regional control has been perfect. However, the rate of late complications from treatment, many of which are irreversible, is still high. Radiation-related optic neuropathy is the late complication that optic nerves might be affected during the radiotherapy due to the close location of the nasopharynx. Incidence of this is 8.7-9% in head and neck cancer and is observed between 2-9 years after RT. Painless, irreversible, and progressive vision loss usually occurs, and the pallor of optic disc margins, retinal vein dilatation, bleeding, and neovascularization are in the ophthalmic examination. The risk of optic neuropathy increases when the tumor is in close contact with optic nerves, radiation dose, concurrent chemotherapy used, history of diabetes or hypertension. The aim of our study is to prospectively evaluate optic neuropathy in nasopharynx cancer patients treated in our clinic.
This is an opene-label, single center, randomized prospective pilot study to compare the efficacy of weekly versus triweekly fosaprepitant regimens for the prevention of nausea and emesis during concurrent chemoradiotherapy for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC).