View clinical trials related to Neoplasm Metastasis.
Filter by:The researchers are doing this study to find out whether hemithoracic intensity-modulated pleural radiation therapy (IMPRINT) is a safe treatment that causes few or mild side effects in people with pleural metastases from thymic malignancies. The researchers will also look at whether hemithoracic IMPRINT is effective against participants' cancer.
This is a Phase 1, open-label, dose-escalation and dose-expansion study comprised of a screening period, a single treatment session, an evaluation period of 21±3 days, and safety and survival follow-up period of up to 12 weeks post-treatment.
To determine if the experimental approach of early radiation oncology involvement alongside standard oncologic care will result in higher HRQL at 6 months compared to the control arm receiving standard oncologic care alone, based on the global subscale score of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-C30 questionnaire.
This study is a prospective, multi-omics, observational study aimed at detecting peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer by combined assays for methylation of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and other blood-based biomarkers. The study will enroll 384 participants with gastric cancer.
Randomized phase II trial. The study aims to investigate a different and potentially safer radio therapeutic treatment method for brain metastases. The current standard of stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) in one or three fractions is compared to fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (fSRT) in five fractions.
This is a research study to determine if performing stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) prior to surgical resection of the brain metastasis (tumor) will improve local control, in other words, increase the possibility of total removal of the primary tumor without local recurrence on longterm follow up. This research study will also determine if pre-operative SRS will lower the risk of radionecrosis that is the breakdown of body tissue at the original tumor site, and the development of leptomeningeal disease.
Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI/MRI) has been described in recent literature as a highly sensitive and specific modality for the detection of peritoneal metastases (PM). It has been demonstrated to be superior to computed tomography (CT) for patients with known peritoneal disease from colorectal and gynaecological malignancies. However, the literature is scarce on the role of DWI/MRI in patients with pancreatic ductal-adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The aim of this study is to prospectively assess the added value of whole-body DWI/MRI (WB-DWI/MRI) to CT for detection of PM in the preoperative staging of patients with high-risk PDAC and evaluate how it correlates with intraoperative findings.
This is an open-label, single-intervention, multicenter clinical trial in patients with non-small cell lung cancer with asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic brain metastases after failure of EGFR TKI treatment. The objective of this study is as follows. - Primary objective : intracranial objective response rate (iORR) with RECIST 1.1 - Secondary objectives : intracranial progression free survival(iPFS), Intracranial objective response rate in T790M negative, isolated CNS progression patient group, overall Objective Rsponse Rate(ORR), duration of response(DoR), disease control rate(DCR), treatment failure pattern): intracranial progression or extracranial progression or both, salvage intracranial treatment rate, safety and tolerability
Liver metastases are one of the most common sites of metastasis in advanced gastric cancer. Chemotherapy remains the mainstay of treatment for these patients, but combination chemotherapy has encountered a bottleneck in improving patient survival, with no significant improvement in survival rates at 1, 3 or 5 years. In a previous phase II clinical study we not only observed the survival benefits of Tislelizumab in the treatment of GI tumors such as liver, oesophageal and some gastric cancers, but also confirmed the safety of Tislelizumab in the treatment of advanced GI tumors. This study is a clinical study of PD-1 monoclonal antibody (Tislelizumab) in combination with SOX (Tegafur + Oxaliplatin) for the treatment of liver metastases from gastric cancer. It aims to further explore a new combination therapy for liver metastases from gastric cancer, which is safe and effective for patients with difficult-to-treat disease.
Patients with advanced HER2+ breast cancer on maintenance trastuzumab/pertuzumab or T-DM1 with 1st or 2nd intracranial disease event (brain metastases) and stable extracranial disease will be enrolled. They will receive local therapy with stereotactic radiosurgery ± surgical resection if indicated followed by enrollment. Patients will continue standard of care trastuzumab/pertuzumab or T-DM1 with the addition of tucatinib. Hormone receptor positive patients requiring endocrine therapy should continue. Study treatment will continue until disease progression or intolerable side effects. Patients on trial with extracranial disease progression with stable intracranial disease should continue tucatinib into next line of therapy.