View clinical trials related to Rectal Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is an open-label, non-randomized, Phase 1b/2 study to determine the safety and tolerability of NC410 when combined with a standard dose of pembrolizumab. This study will also assess the clinical benefit of combination therapy in participants with advanced unresectable and/or metastatic ICI refractory solid tumors OR ICI naïve MSS/MSI-low solid tumors
A multi-institutional registry of collected data on patients with rectal cancer who underwent surgical resection between January 2009 and December 2018 at the departments of colorectal surgery of five medical institutions in China
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of an organ-sparing strategy after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy followed by transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) or endoscopic local resection for early low rectal cancer(cT 1-3N0M0).Besides, the clinical complete response rate and near-clinical complete response rate, organ preservation rate, local recurrence rate, distant metastasis rate and quality of life (QoL) will also be assessed.
The study evaluates the combination of immunotherapy of PD-1 antibody and neoadjuvant short-course radiotherapy in early low rectal cancer. A total of 34 patients will receive 5*5Gy short-course radiotherapy, followed by 4 cycles of capecitabine plus oxaliplatin (CAPOX) chemotherapy and PD-1 antibody, finally receive the local excision(TEM) or total mesorectal excision (TME). The rate of complete response (CR, pCR + sustained cCR for ≥ 1 year), Organ retention rate, long-term prognosis, and adverse effects will be analyzed.
The treatment of rectal cancer is developing rapidly in the Netherlands, as well as internationally. This is accompanied by an increase in complexity of diagnosis and treatment, particularly when the tumor is located closer to the anorectal junction. Within these developments there is an important role for quality evaluation, where continuous feedback is able to improve care for rectal cancer in the Netherlands. By supplementing data from the Dutch ColoRectal Audit (DCRA) with additional data concerning diagnostics and treatment of rectal cancer patients operated in the year 2016, the Snapshot Rectumcarcinoom 2016 aimed to assess the improvement in surgical and oncological outcomes.
Standard care for locally advanced rectal cancer consists in a neoadjuvant therapy followed by surgery. Morbidity and mortality remain high after rectal surgery, and often linked with quality of life impairment. 10 to 30% present a pathological complete response after neoadjuvant therapy. Some surgical teams propose "watch and wait" approach for patients selected with clinical complete responses criterion. The problem is to be sur the response is complete. MRI seems to be accurate to select complete responders. We will try to find MRI criterion of complete responses.
The purpose of this project is to determine if in a selected group of patients, at higher risk of wound dehiscence and other complications, treatment by local excision and management by a "watchful waiting" or an initial "non-operative management" approach, with an offer of radical resection only to those patients whose tumors demonstrate "regrowth" will maintain acceptable local control and overall survival rate for the whole cohort.
This pilot study aims to trial multimodal early response assessment to enable therapy adaptions in the context of non-operative therapy strategies of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) for development of a non-invasive response prediction model.
Establish a deep learning model based on multi-parameter magnetic resonance imaging to predict the efficacy of neoadjuvant therapy for locally advanced rectal cancer.This study intends to combine DCE with conventional MRI images for DL, establish a multi-parameter MRI model for predicting the efficacy of CRT, and compare it with the DL and non-artificial quantitative MRI diagnostic model constructed by conventional MRI to evaluate the role of DL in MRI predicting CRT. And this study also tries to build a DL platform to assess the efficacy of LARC neoadjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy, accurately assess patients' complete respose (pCR) after CRT, and provide an important basis for guiding clinical decision-making.
Indocyanine green NIR imaging is valuable for lymph node dissection in D3 radical surgery for rectal cancer. It can guide the intraoperative improvement of lymph node dissection based on the preservation of LCA and peripheral autonomic nerves of IMA. This not only reduces the occurrence of postoperative complications and promotes rapid postoperative recovery, but also provides a more precise and individualized comprehensive treatment plan for patients after surgery. In addition,this trial also demonstrated that ICG is safe and feasible for use in rectal cancer