View clinical trials related to Neoadjuvant Therapy.
Filter by:The goal of this interventional study is to compare the safety and efficacy of neoadjuvant immunotherapy plus chemotherapy and anlotinib versus immunotherapy combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy in the treatment of locally advanced esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. The main question it aims to answer is: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of neoadjuvant immunotherapy plus chemotherapy and anlotinib versus immunotherapy combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy in patients with locally advanced esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and to explore the optimal preoperative neoadjuvant treatment regimen for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant camrelizumab combined with chemotherapy in resectable stage IIIA and IIIB (T3-4N2) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Inclusion criteria are: age 18-75, pathologically confirmed resectable stage IIIA-IIIB (T3-4N2) NSCLC, absence of EGFR, ALK, and ROS1 gene mutations, and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) status 0-1. All patients receive three cycles of camrelizumab combined with platinum-based doublet chemotherapy, followed by curative surgery within 4-6 weeks after completion of chemotherapy. Patients undergo 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT scans in 1 week before treatment and 1 week before surgery, and peripheral blood samples are collected for biomarker analysis. The primary endpoints for follow-up are pathologic complete response (pCR) rate and major pathological response (MPR) rate, while secondary endpoints include safety and progression-free survival. Exploratory endpoints include molecular imaging research and biomarker analysis.
This clinical trial aimed to confirm the effectiveness of sentinel lymph node surgery by determining the lymph node identification rate using multimodal sentinel lymph node marker methods in patients with advanced breast cancer undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC).
Gastric cancer is an important disease burden that threatens human health. Due to the complex biological characteristics of gastric cancer, the research on gastric cancer is still at a low level. Organoid technology is a breakthrough technology in cancer research. Gastric cancer organoid is a good model for gastric cancer research by three-dimensional culture of tumor cells in vitro, which simulates the spatial morphology and structure of tumors in vivo while preserving the biological characteristics of tumor cells. At present, gastric cancer organoid models have shown great advantages in many fields, such as the mechanism of gastric cancer development, tumor drug resistance, large-throughput chemotherapy drug screening, novel therapeutic target searching, and preclinical validation of novel drugs. In the current clinical trial, investigators cultured organoids from gastroscopic biopsy tissue of gastric cancer patients, and compared the organoids with the sampled tumors, including immunohistochemical indicators (Ki67+/CK20+/CDX2+), WES sequencing results. At the same time according to the guidelines. The recommended treatment plan is to compare the organoid model drug screening results with the clinical drug sensitivity.
Clinical Study on the Safety and Efficacy of the efficacy and safety of adbelizumab combined with chemotherapy for neoadjuvant treatment of resectable pancreatic cancer
Through the neoadjuvant treatment with a combination of Cardonilli and Lenvatinib, it enabled the successful and safe implementation of partial nephrectomy in patients with localized renal cancer, who had indications for nephron-sparing surgery but faced considerable difficulty in preserving the kidney (T1b with an endophytic component ≥75% or T2)
This study aims to elucidate the effects of neoadjuvant Tislelizumab combined with chemotherapy in locally advanced Microsatellite Stable (MSS) colon cancer.
This study is a prospective, open-label, multi-center phase III study; patients with untreated stage IIIA to stage IVB head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (including oral cavity cancer, oropharyngeal cancer, hypopharyngeal cancer, and laryngeal cancer) who meet the inclusion criteria are randomized 1:1 and given pembrolizumab 200 mg d1+ chemotherapy for 2 cycles (experimental group), 2 cycles of chemotherapy (control group), and then stratified according to the patient's condition. If the imaging evaluation after neoadjuvant treatment is (complete response, CR), adjuvant radiotherapy will be given; if the imaging evaluation is (partial response, PR) or (stable disease, SD), surgery (within 2 weeks) will be performed, followed by standard treatment. The main research hypothesis of this study: pembrolizumab combined with standard chemotherapy can significantly improve the rate of pathological complete response (pCR) compared with standard chemotherapy.
Neoadjuvant Triprizumab and Radiotherapy in Operable Patients With Stage IIA-IIIA Non-small Cell Lung Cancer
There exists substantial evidence suggesting that patients diagnosed with MSI-H/dMMR colorectal cancer can derive benefits from immunotherapy in the management of advanced colorectal cancer. In cases of locally advanced colorectal cancer exhibiting microsatellite instability (dMMR/MSI-H), patients exhibit low responsiveness to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, resulting in minimal rates of complete tumor remission and downstaging. Nevertheless, initial exploratory studies, characterized by modest sample sizes, reveal a favorable therapeutic effect of neoadjuvant immunotherapy in this particular patient population. Envafolimab monoclonal antibody, the first PD-L1 antibody developed and manufactured in China, possesses noteworthy practical and societal value in the context of exploratory clinical research on neoadjuvant immunotherapy for locally advanced MSI-H/dMMR colorectal cancer patients. The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of envafolimab monoclonal antibody (PD-L1) as neoadjuvant therapy for locally advanced MSI-H/dMMR colorectal cancer through a prospective, multi-cohort phase II clinical trial. Additionally, this study aims to investigate the effectiveness and safety of envafolimab monoclonal antibody in combination with CAPEOX as a neoadjuvant treatment regimen for locally advanced pMMR colorectal cancer.