View clinical trials related to Neoplastic Cells, Circulating.
Filter by:Colorectal cancer represents a major public health problem in France because of its high incidence and severe prognosis. Early stages of the disease are well know and have justified the establishment of a mass screening strategy. Unfortunately, the factors determining the progression to metastatic disease about them much harder to grasp. Various prognostic factors and predictors of treatment response have been identified and are being used but most of them are In practice, they are sometimes coarse and relatively little discriminant for patients. It is now possible to directly quantify the amount of circulating tumor cells in peripheral blood. Quantification of circulating tumor cells beyond a threshold of 3 cells/7,5 ml has been established as a major prognostic factor, and the rapid decrease in the number of these cells under treatment is also a predictor of response for patients suffering from metastatic colorectal cancer . Furthermore, it has also been shown that the quality and importance of the systemic and peritumoral inflammatory response in carcinomas, including colorectal, played a key role in the prognosis of patients. In particular, the presence of high levels of blood neutrophils has been raised by many studies as being followed by a poorer prognosis. However, the correlation between the presence of circulating tumor cells and high levels of neutrophils has never been studied. There is a rational to assume that this association exists, and secondly that the presence of circulating tumor cells in a proinflammatory environment represented by a high levels of blood neutrophils promotes metastasis by exerting a negative synergistic effect on the prognosis of patients. The main objective of this pilot study is to find a correlation between the amount of circulating neutrophils and the presence of circulating tumor cells in patients with colon cancer metastatic unresectable non-pretreated. The secondary objective is to investigate whether this association results in a negative synergistic effect in terms of progression-free survival and survival to one year. This is a non-interventional study. The investigators expect the inclusion in one year of thirty patients in two centers (University Hospital Centre Antoine Lacassagne Nice) to achieve these goals.
To determine whether the presence of circulating/disseminated tumour cells (CTCs/DTCs) in the blood and bone marrow of the resectable lung cancer (NSCLC) patients is a negative prognostic factor, and to find correlations with other clinical/pathological disease characteristics.
To investigate the effects of perioperative anesthetic drugs propofol and desflurane on circulating tumor nucleic acids (CK7, ELF3, EGFR and EphB4 mRNA) in the blood of patients with liver cancer, so as to provide scientific reference for clinical anesthesia in the perioperative treatment of tumor
The investigators examined circulating tumor cells (CTC) in the perioperative peripheral blood of hundreds of HCC patients undergoing liver cancer surgery using CellSearch technology between 2013 and 2016. Although the investigators have done a preliminary study of the above data and published some results, the previous study was only a basic analysis. Now the investigators plan to carry out further in-depth analysis of these data, including hospitalization data, follow-up results, surgical tumors and blood specimens, and make full use of biostatistics, molecular biology, pathology and other related techniques to elucidate the association between the levels of CTC or CTC clusters and patients' disease during the perioperative period, and to explore the molecular basis of CTC production in hepatocellular carcinoma.
This study will study circulating tumor cell (CTC) release during laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (LRN) for RCC. The main objective is to determine if CTC release can be reduced during RN by using a no-touch technique, with an early renal pedicle ligation. The investigators also aim to describe the CTC profile in terms of CTC count (CTCn), epithelial/mesenchymal status, and CTC cellular features in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients, stratified by "primary tumor, regional nodes, metastasis" (TNM) staging, histological subtype, and other clinical and radiological features. Patients undergoing RN will enter a two-arm prospective single-center randomized controlled trial (RCT), comparing a no-touch RN technique, with direct pedicle ligation (Group A) vs. the more conventional approach of kidney traction and manipulation to reach the renal pedicle before its ligation (Group B). A microfluidic size-based CTC isolation device will be used to capture and count CTCs from peripheral blood samples of these patients. CTCs will be identified by staining with antibodies to cytokeratin 8/18, vimentin, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), and cluster of differentiation antigen 45 (CD45). CTC release will be correlated with the disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS). The investigators will determine if CTC reducing no-touch radical nephrectomy technique improves these hard outcomes.
Multiple lines of evidence have shown that perioperative opioids requirement was associated with poor outcomes in cancer patients, including increased cancer progression and metastases and reduced survival in patients with lung, breast, prostate, and bladder cancer. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have been validated as prognostic biomarkers of a number of cancers. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of perioperative opioids on the number of CTCs in patients receiving robot-assisted laparoscopic radical cystectomy. The difference of the amounts of perioperative opioids is achieved by using general anesthesia combined with intravenous opioid-based analgesia intra- and post-operatively in one group and general analgesia combined with epidural ropivacaine-based analgesia in the other group.
This study evaluates the use of ctDNA and CTCs in predicting disease activity and drug response in lung cancer patients and serves to complement existing methods to achieve a non-invasive and accurate means to guide treatment decisions.
This study aims to evaluate the prognostic value of circulating tumour cells (CTC) in patients undergoing cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy due to gastrointestinal cancers that have spread to the peritoneum.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the spread of Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC) during surgery in endometrial cancer. Although this cancer is often discovered at early stage, the risk of recurrence is estimated at 6 to 21%, according to grade. Early stage tumor is accessible for curative surgical treatment by laparoscopy but this kind of surgery may induce CTCs spread, and could be an explanation of this recurrence. Through this study, concordance between two blood punction sites, peripheral vein and ovarian vein, will be evaluated to detect these cells during surgery.
Local percutaneous thermal ablation is frequently proposed in the management of metastatic diseases. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) has demonstrated good results when the metastatic disease is limited and slowly evolving. The destruction of solid metastasis by RF leads to inflammatory and immunological mechanisms that remain poorly understood. These pathological events may influence the overall and anti-tumor host immune responses. The purpose of the study is to identify and quantify some immune mechanisms triggered by RFA of pulmonary metastases from colorectal cancer origin.