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Neoplasm Metastasis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04824079 Recruiting - Brain Metastases Clinical Trials

Keynatinib in Treated Patients With NSCLC and Brain Metastases

Start date: October 21, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Keynatinib capsules in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with brain metastasis or progression of brain metastasis after treatment with EGFR inhibitors. As well as, to evaluate the penetration rate of Keynatinib in the Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB) and its PK characteristics, and the relationship between exposure levels with efficacy and safety.

NCT ID: NCT04807582 Recruiting - Cerebral Metastases Clinical Trials

Measuring Fatty Acid Oxidation in Cerebral Metastases Using [18F]FPIA

Start date: September 25, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cerebral metastases represent a significant problem for oncological management. It is estimated that 20-40% of patients with cancer will develop metastatic cancer to the brain during the course of their illness. 18F-fluoropivalate ([18F]FPIA) is a new tracer that images short chain fatty acid (SCFA) uptake in tumours, a key component of fatty acid oxidation. The aim of this study is to quantify the degree of early step fatty acid oxidation in cerebral metastases as imaged by [18F]FPIA Positron Emission Tomography (PET)/Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). The investigators hypothesise that FPIA uptake will be higher in metastases that are treatment naïve compared to those that have undergone treatment, in keeping with viable tumour cells having a high propensity to generate ATP and NADPH via fatty acid oxidation under bioenergetic stress.

NCT ID: NCT04803773 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Painful Bone Metastases

MRI-guided Focused Ultrasound : Feasibility Study for the Treatment of Bone Metastases and osteoïd Osteoma

UFOGUIDE
Start date: January 19, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Ufoguide is a prospective single arm open study to assess the feasibility of a new type of HIFU system to treat bone tumors. HIFU is classically delivered by a transducer integrated in the MRI table. This study assesses a new type of approach in which the HIFU transducer is manually placed on the skin of the patient, under the assistance of optical navigation, and held in place by MR-compatible passive arms. The primary goal of this study is to assess the feasibility of heating the tumor accurately with this new HIFU system. The evaluation and monitoring of the treatment will be performed by MR thermometry. Secondary endpoints include the evaluation of clinical efficacy, quality of life and safety.

NCT ID: NCT04802603 Recruiting - Spine Metastases Clinical Trials

Dose-Escalated Spine SbRT for Localized Metastasis to the Spinal Column

DESSRT
Start date: March 14, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is being done to determine the feasibility and tolerability of a novel regimen of spine stereotactic radiosurgery (SSRS). SSRS delivers high doses of radiation to tumors of the spine using precision techniques. In standard medical care, conventional SSRS is delivered in only 1 or 2 treatments. When this treatment is delivered in only 1-2 treatments, a high dose is used which can increase the side effects of treatment. This study aims to test an alternative technique of delivering SSRS over 5 treatments. By delivering the radiation therapy over multiple treatments, the dose of radiation is less per treatment.

NCT ID: NCT04801342 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Metastatic Malignant Neoplasm to Brain

Neurocognitive Outcome of Bilateral or Unilateral Hippocampal Avoidance WBRT With Memantine for Brain Metastases

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Brain metastases are the most common brain tumors in adults. It is estimated that around 10-30% of cancer patients would develop brain metastases during the course of their illness. Whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) is the treatment of choice for the majority of patients with brain metastases. WBRT yields high radiologic response rate (27~56%) and is effective in rapid palliation of neurologic symptoms as well as prolongs time to neurocognitive function decline caused by intracranial lesions. By using conventional fractionation, more than one- third of patients developed late neurocognitive toxicity while memory impairment was the most common symptom. The incidence is even higher when a formal and sensitive neurocognitive assessment was prospectively evaluated. With more long-term survivors nowadays, it has become increasingly important to minimize neurocognitive function decline and maintain quality of life in patients with brain metastasis. The function of hippocampus is cooperation in learning, consolidation and retrieval of information and essential for formation of new memories. Bilateral and unilateral radiation injury of the hippocampus is known to alter learning and memory formation. Several preclinical studies support the hypothesis of hippocampus-mediated cognitive dysfunction by ionizing radiation. Clinical studies show increase in radiation dose to hippocampus is associated with subsequent neurocognitive function impairment in adult and pediatric patients. Furthermore, the result of phase III randomized trials suggested hippocampal avoidance plus Memantine significantly reduce the risk of neurocognitive impairment at 6 months from 68.2% in control arm with standard WBRT to 59.5% in experimental arm. In the investigator's prior investigation, patients received conformal WBRT with bilateral hippocampal avoidance also had significant less declines in verbal memory at 6 months. Previous studies showed the right and left hippocampus exert different neurocognitive functions. Several retrospective studies also demonstrated that the radiation dose to the left hippocampus is more related to neurocognitive impairment. Planning study and investigation showed that by avoiding the left hippocampus alone, the radiation dose to the spared unilateral hippocampus is further decreased. In present study, a single blind randomized phase II trial is designed to investigate the effectiveness of neurocognitive function preservation using conformal WBRT with bilateral or unilateral hippocampal avoidance and memantine.

NCT ID: NCT04798898 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Liver Metastasis Colon Cancer

Improving Survival of COlorectal LIver Metastases by RFA-mediated Immunostimulation

ISCOLIM
Start date: November 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To examine radio frequency ablation as a treatment supplement to stimulate immunogenicity and improve survival for patients undergoing curative-intent surgery for colorectal liver metastases.

NCT ID: NCT04793061 Recruiting - Metastatic Cancer Clinical Trials

Circulating Tumor DNA as Marker for Response to Antineoplastic Treatment of Metastatic Cancer (FLUIDO)

FLUIDO
Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Early monitoring of antineoplastic treatment benefit is a central medical need. Radiologic assessment for documentation of response is done after several months of treatment usually. This implies that patients not responding are exposed to unnecessary toxicity. According to several reports showing the correlation of the amount of circulating tumour DNA with tumour burden we aim to investigate its early dynamic change at the beginning and during antineoplastic treament until radiologic response assessment. Blood samples necessary for that are taken within the scope of clinical routine care. We hypothesize that the changes of circulating tumour DNA correlate with the radiological findings.

NCT ID: NCT04790968 Recruiting - Prostatic Neoplasms Clinical Trials

Combined PSMA PET/MRI for Detection of Lymph Node Metastases in High-risk Prostate Cancer Patients

Start date: April 28, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

For high-risk prostate cancer patients, detection of lymph node metastases is crucial to ensure optimal treatment. Standard treatment for these patients is radiotherapy or surgery. The surgery involves resection of the prostate and the pelvic lymph nodes. Currently, the most reliable method to confirm lymph node metastases is by histologic examination of the resected lymph nodes. Ideally, one should be able to detect lymph node metastases prior to treatment. Then, the treatment could be better adjusted to each patient. Imaging methods such as prostate specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography (PSMA-PET) can possibly aid the detection of lymph node metastases. In this study, the investigators want to test whether PSMA-PET or a combination of PSMA-PET and MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) can improve staging of lymph nodes before treatment.

NCT ID: NCT04789109 Recruiting - Liver Metastases Clinical Trials

CapTem Plus Radioembolization for NET Liver Metastases

CapTemY90
Start date: November 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Grade 2 neuroendocrine tumors have an intermediate rate of progression following embolotherapy of liver metastases. The combination of capecitabine and temozolomide has been shown to be an active regimen in this disease. Both drugs are radiosensitizers, and in a safety and feasibility study were combined with yttrium-90 radioembolization with acceptable additive toxicities and better than expected response and duration of disease control. This study expands use of this regimen in a Phase 2 investigation to confirm efficacy of the integrated chemoradiation technique.

NCT ID: NCT04787185 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Brain Metastases From NSCLC

Stereotactic Radiotherapy in Association With Immunotherapy for the Treatment of NSCLC Brain Metastases

STRAITLUC
Start date: April 17, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study's primary objective is the evaluation of toxicities reported during RS or HFSRT in patients with brain metastases from NSCLC undergoing immunotherapy (Safety), with particular reference to the rate of symptomatic radionecrosis and intralesional hemorrhage. Others primary objectives of the study are the Feasibility and the intracranial control of the disease, both local (site radiotherapy treatment) and at a distance (intracranial, but at a distance from the site of the disease treated with stereotaxic radiotherapy). The secondary objectives concern quality assessment of life of the patients under study (Quality Of Life, QoL).