View clinical trials related to Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma.
Filter by:This study was to evaluate the efficacy ,toxic reaction and safety of different chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy on patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
This is an open-label, single center, non-randomized, phase I trial to evaluate safety and efficacy of using the combination treatment of SHR-1210, gemcitabine and cis-platinum by recurrent and metastatic NPC.
Radiation Plus Concurrent Nimotuzumab in Elderly Patients With Locoregionally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
The aim of this study is the safety and efficacy of high-activity natural killer immunotherapy to small metastases of nasopharyngeal cancer.
The purpose of this study is to compare the survival and toxicity of TPC (TAXOL, DDP AND CAPECITABINE ) VS PF (cisplatin and 5-Fluorouracil) as induction chemotherapy combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) for stage IVa-b nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients in endemic area.
There is no standard third-line systemic treatment for inoperable locoregionally advanced recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). We investigated the efficacy and safety of metronomic oral cyclophosphamide as third-line treatment or beyond.
Malnutrition is very common in locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma(NPC) patients undergoing current chemoradiotherapy (CRT) due to dysphagia, mucositis, nausea and other treatment-related problems. Malnutrition is associated with lower physical functioning, lower immune status, more severe (grade III/IV) late RT-induced toxicities, treatment interruption of chemo(radio)therapy, lower chemotherapy response rates, hospital readmission, impaired quality of life (QoL), and increased mortality. Although the international guidelines recommend early nutritional support in the presence of nutritional risk, the best type of nutritional intervention is still unclear. Individualized dietary counseling showed beneficial effects in nutritional intake, nutritional status and QoL in head and neck cancer patients undergoing RT or CRT-treatment; oral nutritional supplements (ONS) was most acceptable in Chinese NPC patients. Previous nutritional intervention trials in head-neck cancer patients have been conducted on small samples and did not clarify the role of oral nutritional supplements (ONS). Accordingly, although current guidelines recommend as grade A the use of ONS associated with dietary counseling for head-neck cancer patients undergoing RT, the efficacy of this nutritional intervention still needs to be evaluated in adequately sized and randomized clinical trials for Chinese NPC patients.
The investigators evaluate if there are radiation dosimetric parameters for the prediction of biochemical and clinical hypothyroidism after intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) for non-metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC).
Currently, most protocols of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) of various research bodies such as the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group require routine elective irradiation to the retropharyngeal area and to levels II-V lymph nodal areas regardless of the status of nodal metastasis. Previous studies had confirmed that the pattern of cervical lymph node (LN) metastasis in NPC followed an orderly manner. Retropharyngeal LNs were the most commonly involved, followed by upper neck levels II, III, or VA nodes, and finally to the lower neck nodes including level IV and VB nodes; and the incidence of LN skip metastasis is rare, ranging from 0.5% to 7.9%. It was rare for NPC patients without neck LN metastases to experience neck failure after elective irradiation to levels II, III and VA. It was also confirmed that with unilateral LN metastases of higher-level LNs usually spread down ipsilateral LNs. Thus, the investigators conduct the non-inferior randomized trial to determine the value of elective neck irradiation in NPC patients with unilateral or bilateral uninvolved neck.
This is a study of pembrolizumab (MK-3475) versus standard treatment (capecitabine, gemcitabine, or docetaxel) for the treatment of recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC). Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either pembrolizumab or Investigator's choice of standard treatment. The primary study hypothesis is that pembrolizumab treatment prolongs Overall Survival (OS) when compared to standard treatment. With Amendment 7 (effective 2-March-2022), upon study completion, participants will be discontinued and may be enrolled in an extension study.