View clinical trials related to Right-sided Colon Cancer.
Filter by:Colorectal surgery has made progressive advances in recent years related on one hand to the implementation of diagnostic methods that allow an early diagnosis of tumors and on the other hand to the development of therapeutic options based on laparoscopic surgery. In particular, multicenter clinical trials have shown that the laparoscopic approach to colorectal cancer had a comparable or even better outcomes in terms of perioperative complications and functional recovery of patients than traditional surgery. Complete Mesocolic Excision (CME) in right colonic resections is a surgical approach, of greater technical complexity, that appears to improve the oncological outcomes of these patients at the cost of an increased rate of complications. The highest rate of complications reported in the literature in patients undergoing CME was related to intraoperative bleeding due to the central vascular dissection that is performed. CT technological advances have made possible to perform CT angiography with multiplanar and three-dimensional reconstructions with the possibility of obtaining a detailed preoperative map of the vascular anatomy of these patients. CT scan was acquired immediately before contrast material injection and during arterial and venous phase. Arterial phase was obtained using the bolus tracking technique with an automated scan-triggering software. Image analysis was performed using multiplanar reformations (MPR), maximum intensity projection (MIP) and 3D volume rendering (VR) technique. The purpose of the CT was to identify three different parameters necessary for proper performance of CME and CVL and to compare preoperative observations with intraoperative evidence. All surgeries were performed by teams experienced in laparoscopic colorectal surgery. The investigators evaluated:- Fascia of Fredet; vascular structures; lymph nodes.
Clinical studies have shown that patients with right-sided colon cancer have reduced progression-free and overall survival compared to patients with left-sided colon cancer. At the same time, patients with right-sided colon adenomas have a higher risk of developing interval cancers after endoscopic mucosal resection. Dysbiosis and known bacterial drivers play a significant role in the carcinogenesis of colorectal cancer, and may contribute to the growth of adenomas. Clinical studies have found biofilm formation and positive staining for Fusobacterium nucleatum (FN) in almost all right-sided colon cancers and adenomas. The composition of bacteria also in the normal mucosa in these two groups of patients has been found to be different from healthy controls. Endoscopic preoperative antibiotic local treatment of the biofilm and tumors would theoretically result in decreased tumor mass, recovery of the mucosa, and a normalization of the immune response in the treated section of the colon. The oral administration of the antibiotic metronidazole in mice has shown to lower the tumor load (FN-positive xenograft tumors) and decrease in intratumoral abundance of the pro-carcinogenic bacteria, FN. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of local antibiotic treatment with fosfomycin and metronidazole on tumor characteristics and the colonic biofilm in patients with right-sided colon cancer or right-sided colon adenomas. This is a clinical proof-of-concept intervention study, and the investigators are to our knowledge the first group to look into local antibiotic treatment of biofilm in patients with colon cancer or colon adenoma. It is based on a non-randomized trial design with an open label single group assignment. There are two tracks depending on the pathology of the tumor: 1) patients with right-sided colon cancer; 2a) patients with right-sided colon adenoma. The intervention is a therapeutic endoscopy where the antibiotics fosfomycin and metronidazole are sprayed throughout the right colon section from caecum to the right colon flexure (100ml of gel contains 800mg of fosfomycin and 200mg of metronidazole). Patients will be included prospectively from the surgical department of Herlev University Hospital and Zealand University Hospital once having received oral and written information, followed by signing the consent. There will be a retrospective cohort of patients with colon adenoma from 2018 (track 2b). The investigators will retrieve the archived adenoma tissue as control tissue. In Clinical Trial, Track 1 and Track 2a will be registered as two different arms that use the same intervention, but the results from each arm later on is going to be reported in separate publications.