View clinical trials related to Stage III Colon Cancer.
Filter by:This Phase II/III trial will evaluate the what kind of chemotherapy to recommend to patients based on the presence or absences of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) after surgery for colon cancer.
The aims of this study are to evaluate if an intensified adjuvant treatment with FOLFOXIRI could increase the rate of cases with undetectable ct-DNA after chemotherapy and to evaluate if a further adjuvant treatment with Trifluridine/Tipiracil could increase the rate of cases with undetectable ct-DNA and therefore improve DFS in a population at high-risk of relapse. An additional target-driven cohort of HER2+ RAS wild-type colon cancer patients will be assessed for ct-DNA clearance after a tailored treatment with Trastuzumab and Tucatinib plus FOLFOX
According to general medical guidelines, adjuvant chemotherapy is used after curative resection of high-risk stage II or III primary colon cancer. However, there exist limitations using clinical trial data acquired from highly selected subjects in a controlled environment. For example, patients aged over 70 years old were in many cases excluded from clinical trials resulting in insufficient data on the efficacy of therapies including oxaliplatin in aged patients, and the source data of the medical guidelines did not fully reflect the conditions of Korean patients. In addition, suggestions are continuously being submitted for existing therapies with modified administration periods and methods with the aim to search for the optimum effect over side effects. Discussions are also held on meta analyses results that imply the need to apply slightly different approaches through small groups of patient and disease factors. As there are more diverse adjuvant therapy protocols that can be applied to post-surgery colon cancer patients, it is necessary to figure out the patterns of adjuvant chemotherapies actually used in Korean medical practices. Also, in order to complement the limitation of external validity of the existing base clinical data, a multifaceted exploratory analysis will be conducted by making follow-up observations on patterns, prognosis results, quality of life, adverse effects, etc. of post-surgery adjuvant chemotherapies actually used in around 30 sites in Korea under the noninterventional observational study conditions.
Background: 1. . The incidence and mortality of colon cancer are high in China and in the world. 2. . The treatment of many patients in the real world is not standardized, and there are problems such as over-treatment or under-treatment. To explore the adjuvant treatment of colon cancer in the Chinese population, this study will retrospectively analyze real-world data on adjuvant therapy for colon cancer in Chinese patients after radical surgery. The purpose of research: 1. . Current status of adjuvant therapy for stage II-III colon cancer in the real world: chemotherapy regimen, chemotherapy time, efficacy, safety, etc. 2. . Comparison of efficacy and safety of different adjuvant chemotherapy time (<3 months vs. >=3 months) in high-risk stage II and III colon cancer patients in the real world 3. . Comparison of efficacy and safety of different adjuvant chemotherapy regimens (XELOX vs. FOLFOX) in high-risk stage II and III colon cancer patients in the real world
This research study is comparing two standard of care treatment options based on blood test results for participants who have metastatic colon cancer. The names of the potential treatments involved in this study are: - Active surveillance - FOLFIRI treatment - Nivolumab treatment - Encorafenib/Binimetinib/Cetuximab treatment - Trastuzumab + Pertuzumab
We hypothesize through this randomized, prospective, single center adjuvant study, that cytokine-induced killer cell in patients with stage III colon cancer can improve survival in this patient population over control. Stage III colon cancer patients can benefit most from adjuvant chemotherapy, but the 5 year survival rate is still around 60%. We wish CIK cell therapy can improve the survival rate of stage III colon cancer patients.