View clinical trials related to Rectal Neoplasms.
Filter by:Spectral CT is a rapidly expanding imaging modality that allows a reduction in iodine dose and irradiation compared to conventional scanning. It uses the difference in attenuation of the material according to the two different energy levels of the incident x-ray beams. The dual-energy scanner has a wide range of clinical applications, particularly in abdominal imaging.
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tislelizumab combined with simultaneous integrated boost intensity-modulated radiotherapy in treating locally advanced rectal cancer. To explore a new PD-1 inhibitor adjuvant chemotherapy model combined with radiotherapy to treat locally advanced rectal cancer.
The purposes of this study are to explore the trajectory of symptom distress and balance ability in patients with rectal cancer.
This study is a prospective monocentric study aimed to explore the value of 68Ga-FAPI-04 PET imaging in early response evaluation of rectal cancer patients treated with immunotherapy. Patients with histopathologically confirmed diagnosis of rectal cancer will be recruited and undergo 68Ga-FAPI-04 and 18F-FDG PET imaging before treatment and after short-course radiotherapy and two cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus immunotherapy. The two imaging intervals will be completed two days apart. The efficacy of 68Ga-FAPI-04 in early response evaluation will be compared with the general imaging agent 18F-FDG. The general information, clinical data, mpMRI data, 68Ga-FAPI-04 and 18F-FDG PET imaging results and other imaging data of the patients will be collected. The histopathology of the biopsy or surgical specimen after 2 cycles of therapy and follow-up data will be taken as evaluation references. This study plans to set the sample size as 20 cases
This study aimed at comparing the Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI), readmission rates, postoperative hospitalization days, duration of bearing the stoma (months), hospitalization costs, the number of hospitalizations with ghost ileostomy versus conventional loop ileostomy after low anterior resection for rectal cancer.
The introduction of neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy (CRT) and the use of advanced surgical techniques have led to a reduction in mortality and recurrence rates for rectal cancer, the rate of which currently stands at 4-8%. Complete cytoreduction (achieving R0) of local recurrence is the main factor correlating with survival, but surgery can often be very complex because of the change in anatomical planes caused by previous surgery. Reirradiation of the recurrence may increase the rate of optimal resection (R0) and may palliate symptoms in unresectable disease. It is a very complex procedure, because one has to take into account the dose previously received by the organs at risk (OARs) and at the same time be able to deliver an effective dose to the recurrence. However with modern irradiation techniques (VMAT) it is possible to increasingly spare the OARs and deliver adequate doses in this setting as well. Besides radiotherapy with conventional fractionation, other promising options are stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) with and proton (PT) and carbon ion RT (CIRT). Another topic of interest is chemotherapy intensification (CHT): recent studies of concomitant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy (Total Neoadjuvant Therapy) have shown high rates of antitumour response, however even this option should be evaluated with caution, because it must take into account previous cancer treatments received by the patient. Based on the evidence reported in the literature, it is reasonable to assume that treatment of local recurrence of rectal cancer should be multimodal, integrating surgical treatment with CHT and RT, using the different technologies available. To this end, proper stratification of patients is necessary in order to target the appropriate therapy according to the type of recurrence and their clinical condition.
Comparative analysis of the clinical efficacy between primary Total Mesorectal Excision (TME) surgery and neoadjuvant chemotherapy combined with TME surgery for low-risk locally advanced rectal cancer. Randomly enrolling eligible patients into either the control group receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy combined with TME surgery or the experimental group receiving primary TME surgery, and subsequently comparing the clinical outcomes of the two groups
This is an open-label, single-arm study to investigate the efficacy and safety of AK104 (an Anti-PD1 and Anti-CTLA4 Bispecific Antibody) and neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in patients with pMMR/MSS locally advanced rectal cancer.
The research objectives is to compare vitro 3D drug sensitivity test results of micro tumor (PTC) with the clinical outcomes of patients, evaluate the consistency between the test results of the technology platform and the clinical prognosis, and explore the decision-making value and guiding significance of this technology in assisting the precise treatment of colorectal cancer. The completion of this study will provide real-world data support for the clinical application of micro tumor (PTC) in vitro 3D drug sensitivity detection technology, and provide more valuable reference basis for realizing the individualization and accuracy of colorectal cancer treatment and improving the clinical benefit rate.
The objective of the study is to assess the safety and technical feasibility of a new imaging system, used during colorectal resection surgery, named Trident in version 1.0, which could be used by the surgeon during colorectal procedures to obtain information on intestinal tissue oxygenation.