Intraoperative Angiography Using ICG in Rectal Cancer Patients to Prevent Anastamotic Leak After...
Rectal CancerThe study enrols patients with operative rectal cancer qualified for laparoscopic anterior resection. Patients are given first dose of indocyanine green iv intraoperatively (ICG) before choosing the appropriate site of the anastomosis, and the second dose after performing the anastomosis to confirm adequate blood supply to the anastomotis. The main outcome assessed is the frequency o anastomotic leak in comparison to the group of patients that do not undergo intraoperative ICG angiography.
SCRT in TNT With or Without Chlorophyllin
Rectal NeoplasmsThe goal of this clinical trial is to see, if addition of chlorophyllin to neoadjuvant Chemo-radiotherapy can reduce the gastro-intestinal/genitourinary/hematological toxicity rates and improve the quality of life in patient's diagnosed with locally advanced rectal cancer. This is a randomized placebo control trial, wherein participants randomized to Chlorophyllin arm will receive the drug of interest along with the standard treatment. Participants randomized to other arm will receive placebo along with the standard treatment. Researchers will compare the difference between the outcomes from both the arms and will also observe the non-operative management success rates.
Trial Comparing Loop Ileostomy Versus Loop Transverse Colostomy
Rectal NeoplasmsOstomy1 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine which stoma creation technique is preferable after low anterior resection of the rectum.
A Study of Tucatinib and Trastuzumab in People With Rectal Cancer
Adenocarcinoma of the RectumLocally Advanced Rectal Adenocarcinoma3 moreThe study researchers believe that a combination of the drugs trastuzumab and tucatinib, given with standard chemotherapy (capecitabine and oxaliplatin/CAPOX), may help participants with rectal cancer.
No Surgery Trial / Two Dose-escalation Strategies
Stage II Rectal CancerA randomized study of 145 patients. Patients with a clinical T2-3 N0 rectal cancer will be randomized to two arms (arm A: standard chemoradiation (45 Gy in 25 with concomitant 5-FU or Xeloda chemotherapy) and an external beam boost of 9 Gy compared to arm B: standard chemoradiation (45 Gy in 25 with concomitant 5-FU or Xeloda chemotherapy) and followed by a brachytherapy boost of 30 Gy in 3 fractions).
68Ga-FAPI-04 PET Imaging in Early Response Evaluation of Rectal Cancer Patients Treated With Immunotherapy...
Rectal CancerThis 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
Prophylactic Mesh Placement During Stoma Closure After Low Anterior Resection
Neoplasms MalignantRectal Cancer2 moreThe goal of this clinical trial is to compare the efficacy of using polypropylene mesh for hernia prevention after stoma closure in patients with colorectal cancer and non-mesh repair. The main question it aims to answer is: can mesh help prevent hernia? Participants will be divided into 2 groups: with and without mesh using. They must be followed up for 2 years after enrollment in the study. Researchers will compare mesh and non-mesh groups to evaluate the benefits and harms of mesh using in hernia prevention.
Therascreen® KRAS RGQ PCR Kit
Colo-rectal CancerAn interventional, prospective IVD device study for the testing of DNA extracted from tumor tissue biopsy samples from patients with Colorectal Cancer (CRC) who have previously tested positive for the KRAS G12C mutation for potential inclusion into the Amgen Phase III clinical trial (Protocol No 20190172) to demonstrate clinical performance of the therascreen® KRAS RGQ PCR Kit
Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis to Optimize the Operative and Postoperative Treatment for Patients...
Colorectal CancerColo-rectal Cancer13 moreIMPROVE-IT2 is a randomized multicenter trial comparing the outcomes of ctDNA guided post-operative surveillance and standard-of-care CT-scan surveillance. The hypothesis of this study is that ctDNA guided post-operative surveillance combining ctDNA and radiological assessments could result in earlier detection of recurrent disease and identify more patients eligible for curative treatment.
Liquid Biopsies and IMAging for Improved Cancer Care
Rectal CancerThe recently developed liquid biopsy technology (to obtain and characterize tumour cells and tumour components like Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) from a simple blood draw), in combination with advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging techniques (MRI), can tackle the following problems in rectal cancer: 1. Assessment of tumour heterogeneity from liquid biopsies. 2. Assessment from advanced MRI feature extraction to indicate poor outcome 3. Faster assessment of therapy response in Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAT) for rectal cancer; 4. Detection of emerging drug/therapy resistance. This project's overall objective is to develop and validate technologies and tools to include liquid biopsies in the clinical workflow, aiming at introducing a more precise and dynamic genetic characterization of tumour at the diagnosis and during treatment phases.