View clinical trials related to Pancreatic Neoplasms.
Filter by:This phase I/II trial assesses the safety and effectiveness of total pancreatectomy with islet cell autotransplantation for the treatment of patients with long-term pancreatic inflammation (chronic pancreatitis) and non-cancerous (benign) pancreatic tumors. Total removal of the pancreas (pancreatectomy) can be used to treat chronic pancreatitis, but it may result in diabetes. An islet cell autotransplantation involves removing cells from a patient's pancreas (the islet cells) and infusing them into the liver. Islet cells are responsible for producing hormones like insulin, reducing the occurrence of diabetes in patients undergoing total pancreatectomy. Total pancreatectomy with autologous islet cell transplant is an accepted and Food and Drug Administration-approved treatment for patients with chronic pancreatitis. However, patients with chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic tumors have historically not been candidates for this procedure due to concerns of spreading potentially cancerous cells to other parts of the body. This clinical trial evaluates the safety and effectiveness of this treatment in patients with chronic pancreatitis and benign pancreatic tumors.
Detection of Colorectal and Pancreatic Cancers Using Breath Analysis - Feasibility Study
This is a Phase 1b study to assess the safety and tolerability of STI-1386, an oncolytic virus, in subjects with relapsed and refractory solid tumors (RRSTs).
This is a single-arm, open-label, exploratory study to evaluate efficacy and safety of envafolimab combined with endostar and nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine for first-line treatment of advanced pancreatic cancer.
Sequence I (Retrospective study: proteomic analysis of pathological specimens and information collection of previous patients with pancreatic cancer) Sequence 2 (Non-interventional prospective study, sample and information collection in patients with pancreatic cancer) Sequence 3 (Non-intervention study, healthy subjects sample and information collection)
Dissemination from pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) occurs in clinical practice either in the form of recurrence after initial treatment with curative intent resection (metachronous) or more frequently prevails already at the time of diagnosis (synchronous). Traditionally, metastatic pancreatic cancer (mPDAC) is considered not to be eligible for meaningful aggressive therapies to be implemented. However, with the development of local as well as more effective systemic therapeutic regimens a variety of clinical situations have to be reevaluated. For instance, recent reports have indicated an option for maintained or even prolonged survival after resections and/or ablations of oligometastatic pancreatic cancer (OMDPDAC), as represented by a single or few liver metastasis (es). These reports are burdened by methodological weaknesses such as being retrospective, single institution and reporting only from highly selected case series. A common denominator of acceptable outcome is, however, that all metastatic lesions have been preoperatively treated and responded to chemotherapy, indicating an advantageous tumor biology. Hence an unbiased approach, including neo-adjuvant chemotherapy before any aggressive local treatment must be explored to the updated management opportunities in terms of assessing the prevalence, safety, feasibility, tolerability and possible disease control options. Primary objective (clinical): To prospectively investigate (on an intention to treat basis) the safety, feasibility, tolerability and clinical outcomes of all patients with PDAC presenting with limited metastatic disease, where a treatment option can be launched with the ambition of local disease control and eventually better survival. The cohorts to be included are: Primary cohort: Patients with liver limited (metachronous and synchronous) metastasis(es) due to PDAC. This cohort is further subdivided to: Limited liver disease. Extended liver disease. Secondary cohort: Patients with OMDPDAC and at least one extrahepatic manifestation of PDAC. Secondary objective (translational) is to improve the understanding of PDAC liver metastases biology by studying the mechanistic aspects of metastases invasion as well as intra- and peri-tumoral liver metastatic niche, and by charting the cellular composition of liver metastases on single cell level with a focus on the impact of cellular interactions on tumor cell growth and differentiation. Furthermore, the study aims to identify blood-based biomarkers of response to oncologic/surgical treatment.
A Phase II Clinical Trial of the Safety and Efficacy of Fruquintinib in Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Patients Who Failed Second-line Gemcitabine or 5-FU Based Chemotherapy
Pancreatic cancer has the most dismal prognosis with a 5-year survival of 8%. The only curative treatment is surgery which is accompanied by great morbidity and mortality. Recent research indicates that Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is superior in detecting liver metastases compared with today's gold standard computed tomography (CT), which usually is a contraindication to surgery. Investigators want to randomize patients with pancreatic cancer, who are eligible for surgery to a pre-operative MRI. The investigators want to examine if MRI is as good for the staging as CT and if MRI is better for the identification of liver metastases. Patients will have a follow-up period of 1 year to see if MRI changes the overall survival.
Bluestar Genomics has developed a non-invasive test that aids in the qualitative detection of occult pancreatic cancer in patients with new onset type II diabetes (NOD) who are 50 years old or older. The purpose of this study is to validate the performance of Bluestar Genomics early-detection pancreatic cancer test. The study is prospective, longitudinal and interventional; tests will be ordered and results returned to site-investigators. If the assay returns a pancreatic cancer signal "detected" result, the study participant will undergo MRI imaging to evaluate for the presence of pancreatic cancer. The study is planned to enroll 10,000 newly diagnosed type II diabetic subjects according to inclusion and exclusion criteria.
The study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of SHR6390 in combination with nab-paclitaxel and gemcitabine in first-line treatment of subjects with advanced/metastatic pancreatic cancer.