View clinical trials related to Primary Liver Cancer.
Filter by:The Registry on Percutaneous ElectroChemoTherapy (RESPECT) is a post-market, prospective, non-randomized, observational study aiming at evaluating the effectiveness of percutaneous electrochemotherapy (ECT) for the treatment of liver cancer.
To investigate the in vivo performance and safety of a novel medical device for the injection of holmium-166 microspheres during radioembolization. The main potential advantage of this device is that it allows for injection of a during treatment determined dose, which is not possible with the current administration tool.
VG161 is a recombinant human-IL12/15/PDL1B oncolytic HSV-1 Injectable. This phase I study will be conducted in HSV-seropositive subjects with advanced primary liver cancer that are refractory to conventional therapies. This is an open label study and it's divided into two parts. Part 1: This part is ascending dose design to determine the safety and tolerability of VG161 and find recommended dose of VG161. Part 2: This part is extended dose design to determine the effectiveness of VG161.
Patients who meet the enrollment criteria will be randomized 1:1 to either the lidocaine or the placebo group. In the lidocaine group, at the end of the induction of general anesthesia, a bolus injection of lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg, calculated using the patient's ideal body weight and given as an infusion over 10 minutes, followed by a continuous infusion of lidocaine at 1.5 mg/kg per hour for the whole surgical procedure and will be discontinued at the end of surgery. In the placebo group, the same volume of normal saline will be administered during anesthesia.
The aim of this study is to assess the impact of preoperative physical activity on physical capacities of patients undergoing liver resection for primary or secondary liver cancer.
This longitudinal observational cohort study was designed to investigate factors that influencing the occurrence and long-term survival of patients with primary liver cancer. Basic informations and detailed diagnosis informations (AJCC/TNM stage, MELD score, Child-Pugh score, and BCLC stage) were collected by professional doctors. Clinical outcomes (death, recurrence, and metastasis) will be followed up every two years after therapy.
This is a feasibility study requiring only three patients to serve as a proof of concept that gadoxetate disodium (a liver specific contrast agent) can be used to improve images taken just before liver SBRT treatments. The hypothesis of this research is that if gadoxetate disodium improves image quality at the time of treatment, then it can be used for image guided radiotherapy (IGRT). Image guidance is the procedure where the 3D CT image that is used to plan a radiotherapy treatment, is aligned to a 3D image taken just before treatment. The better the alignment, the more accurate the treatment, which is crucial for high dose treatments such as SBRT. This research is important for two main reasons. First, it is much less invasive than the standard of care which involves surgically implanting markers in the liver that can move over time. The benefit to harm ratio for surgery, compared to an injection, is much more dramatic. Furthermore, not all patients are surgical candidates, and therefore in those cases radiation oncologists must prescribed a larger area to treat to ensure that none of the cancerous region is missed. The drawback to this method is the irradiation of more normal tissue than necessary, which although deemed to have a greater benefit than harm, is not ideal. Secondly, this research has strong implications in the field of radiation oncology to move towards patient oriented radiotherapy treatments. If successful, radiation treatment to the liver could be performed in less treatments because of the confidence given to radiation oncologists of the cancer location; knowing exactly the healthy liver regions to avoid.
The aim of this study is to explore the effect of SAMe on recurrence after radical treatment of Primary liver cancer.
In order to make better use of clinical resources of the real world, strengthen the standardization of PLC diagnosis and treatment, and constantly improve the academic level of liver cancer in China, we intends to launch "Chinese Liver Cancer clinical Survey" project in cancer specialized hospitals and large general hospitals and to explore the best clinical pathway of PLC multidisciplinary consultation.
RAMEC is a phase II, multi-center, randomized trial with a safety test. There will be a safety test to establish the safety and tolerability of Neo-MASCT treatment and assess the immune response to the treatment.The randomized trial will assess DFS and immune response.