View clinical trials related to Stomach Neoplasms.
Filter by:This study aims to pool the clinical experience of Spanish centers treating patients with 177Lu-DOTATATE to evaluate the efficacy, tolerance, and safety of the drug in routine clinical practice and to learn about the profiles of patients and tumors treated and the results in each type of patient and tumor.
This study is a phase II study, to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of Camrelizumab combined with apatinib for advanced gastric or esophagogastric adenocarcinoma progressed after immune checkpoint inhibitors.
This is a prospective, case-control study intended to develop and validate a blood-based multi-omics assay and computational model for early detection of gastric cancer. Approximately 450 subjects who receive esophageogastroscopy (EGD) will be enrolled and assigned to three arms including gastric cancer, precancerous lesion, and healthy control based on the diagnosis of EGD and histological results. Cell free DNA will be extracted from peripheral blood of all participants and assayed by next-generation sequencing for biomarkers including somatic mutation, methylation, and chromosome instability signals. In the first stage a multi-omics models will be developed for classification between malignancy group and control groups, and between precancerous group and healthy control. Sensitivity and specificity of the model will be evaluated in an independent validation group in the second stage.
IPXELOX will investigate the safety, tolerability, and antitumor activity of intraperitoneal paclitaxel in combination with chemotherapy in patients with advanced gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis. Study hypotheses: Intraperitoneal paclitaxel administered to subjects at the recommended phase 2 dose will show manageable safety and tolerability and anti-tumor efficacy with systemic capecitabine and oxaliplatin in advanced gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis.
The iGreenGO Study aims to investigate whether the intraoperative application of NIR/ICG technology is associated with a change in the surgical conduct (CSC) during curative-intent gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy in a cohort of Western patients affected by AGC. The preoperative clinical variables potentially associated with CSC will be also investigated
This study investigates the prognostic role of liquid biopsy in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer. Liquid biopsy for the detection of circulating tumor DNA will be performed: - In the peritoneal lavage, during staging laparoscopy (if indicated) and during curative gastrectomy - In plasma, before staging laparoscopy (if indicated), before curative gastrectomy, at hospital discharge, three months after surgery/at the end of adjuvant therapy, and in case of disease recurrence. The aim of this study is to determine the predictive power of liquid biopsy on overall survival and disease free survival.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the overall survival time (OS), objective remission rate(ORR), progression-free survival time(PFS), disease control rate(DCR)of Carelizumab combined with irinotecan and apatinib for the second-line treatment of locally advanced unresectable, recurrent or metastatic adenocarcinoma of stomach and gastroesophageal junction. At the same time, the safety and tolerance of the scheme were preliminarily evaluated.
This is a Phase I/IIa study designed to evaluate if experimental anti-PD-1 and anti-TIM-3 bispecific antibody, AZD7789 is safe, tolerable and efficacious in participants with advanced solid tumors.
This clinical trial collects biospecimen samples to create a personalized ctDNA test to guide treatment for patients with gastrointestinal cancer with peritoneal carcinomatosis. Deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, is the material that carries all the information about how a living thing will work and function. Everyone is born with the same DNA in all our cells throughout our body. Sometimes, some of the cells in the body develop abnormalities in the DNA that cause those cells to grow abnormally and uncontrollably. Cancer occurs when there is abnormal and uncontrolled growth of cells. The DNA in cancer cells is therefore different from the DNA someone is born with. The Signatera ctDNA assay is a laboratory test that takes tumor (cancer) tissue and evaluates it for unique tumor DNA. This evaluation is used to create a report (otherwise known as an assay) personalized to each person's cancer. The personalized assay creates a personalized blood test to detect the level of abnormal DNA from the cancer that may be circulating in the body. Once this personalized blood assay is designed, it may be used to monitor a person's blood for the presence of ctDNA, which will indicate the presence or absence of cancer over time, even after treatment.
Treating Gastric Cancer and Esophagogastric junction adenocarcinoma Patients with MET gene amplifications with Savolitinib