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Active clinical trials for "Stomach Neoplasms"

Results 1811-1820 of 2067

Validation of an Artificial Intelligence System Based on Raman Spectroscopy for Diagnosis of Gastric...

Gastric DysplasiaGastric Intestinal Metaplasia1 more

Early detection and treatment of gastric premalignant lesion and early gastric cancer (EGC) have been proposed to improve outcomes of gastric cancer. Gastric dysplasia is a premalignant lesion and the penultimate stage in gastric carcinogenesis. On white light endoscopy (WLE), it is difficult to distinguish gastric dysplasia and EGC from benign pathology such as gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM). Image enhanced endoscopy such as narrow-band imaging (NBI) is recommended to improve characterization of suspicious gastric lesions detected on WLE. Magnified-endoscopy with NBI (ME-NBI) have been shown to be superior to HD-WLE for diagnosis of GIM and EGC. Data on gastric dysplasia is less robust. Ultimately, biopsy is required to confirm diagnosis of gastric dysplasia/EGC. Gastric dysplasia can be classified into low-grade dysplasia (LGD) or high-grade dysplasia (HGD). Biopsy sampling may not be representative of the final histopathological grade of resected specimens and may under-stage dysplasia. Thus, endoscopic resection (ER) is recommended for gastric dysplasia and EGC on biopsy for diagnostic and therapeutic purpose. The current gap is to improve concordance of endoscopic and histologic findings of gastric dysplasia and early gastric cancer. Raman spectroscopy based artificial intelligence system (SPECTRA IMDx) was developed to provide an objective method to identify patients with gastric premalignant lesions and EGC. SPECTRA IMDx interrogate tissues at the cellular level and utilizes molecular information to provide actionable information to endoscopist during gastroscopy. Studies on diagnostic performance using Raman spectroscopy analysis devices have shown high sensitivity and specificity in detection of gastric cancer and precancerous lesions compared to WLE. However, these studies included few GIM, gastric dysplasia and gastric carcinoma. It is still unclear if Raman spectroscopy outperforms WLE in diagnosis of gastric HGD and EGC. In addition, the Raman spectroscopy algorithm is only able to characterize lesions into high risk (HGD/EGC) versus low risk (GIM/LGD/Gastritis/Normal). It is also uncertain if this technology is able to differentiate GIM and LGD. We plan to conduct a prospective trial to validate the diagnostic accuracy of SPECTRA for prediction of gastric HGD and EGC prior to gastric ER. Hypothesis: SPECTRA IMDx is able to differentiate higher risk lesions (HGD/EGC) from lower risk tissue/lesion (GIM/LGD/Gastritis/Normal)

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Application of OE in Diagnosis of EGC

High Risk Population of Gastric Cancer

The main purpose of this study is to evaluate application value of OE mode 2 in the diagnosis of early gastric cancer The Secondary purpose is to evaluate application value of OE mode 1 in differentiating the diagnosis of neoplastic lesions of the gastric mucosa.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Long-term Outcomes of Open Versus Laparoscopic Distal Gastrectomy for T4a Gastric Cancer

Gastric Cancer

There are more than 75% of patients with gastric cancer who are diagnosed in advanced stage in Vietnam, most of cases in T4a. The purpose of this study was to compare short- and long- term outcomes of open and laparoscopic distal gastrectomy for gastric adenocarcinoma in surgical T4A stage.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Using Radiomics to Predict Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Efficacy

Gastric Cancer

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NC) is an important treatment for advanced gastric cancer (AGC). However, tools that effectively predict the efficacy of NC before treatment are lacking. Computed tomography images before and after NC were used to construct a deep learning-based radiomics signature to predict the efficacy of NC, prognoses and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy benefit.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Specialization in Gastric Cancer Surgery

Stomach NeoplasmsGastric Cancer

Specialization is having competent and effective knowledge on a subject, and the tendency towards specialization is increasing due to the fact that it increases the success in the follow-up and treatment process of diseases. It has been observed that specialization in cancer surgery provides significant improvement in clinical outcomes in recent years. In this study, the effect of specialization in gastric cancer surgery on clinical outcomes is being investigated.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Gastric Cancer Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping

Gastric CancerSentinel Lymph Node1 more

Gastric cancer has an incidence in North America of over 24,000 new cases annually, of which approximately 15% are diagnosed at an early stage. Standard of care for early gastric cancer (EGC) treatment has historically included anatomical resection with regional lymphadenectomy. However, with the recent emergence of organ-sparing techniques, select patients with a very low risk of lymph node metastases are able to avoid anatomical resection and its inherent short and long term consequences. Despite this advance, EGC patients with high risk features continue to require anatomical resection to achieve adequate lymph node staging, despite the fact that 75-95% of these patients ultimately are found to have node negative disease. Due to the inadequacy of standard imaging modalities to reliably detect nodal metastases in EGC patients, sentinel lymph node sampling for gastric cancer was developed using principals similar to those used broadly for breast and melanoma patients. Early reports from Asia suggest this technique has very high success rates, accuracy and sensitivity, however it has never been verified in a North American context. This study aims to test SLN sampling for North American gastric cancer patients at a high volume regional treatment centre, with an aim to expand the application of organ sparing resection to EGC patients. This project aims to determine the sensitivity and accuracy of sentinel lymph node sampling for early gastric cancer patients at a high volume, North American, tertiary care centre.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Chilean Gastric Cancer Task Force (FORCE 1)

Biomarkers

Background. Gastric cancer (GC) is the world's second leading cause of neoplastic mortality. Genetic alterations, response to treatments and mortality rates are highly heterogeneous across different regions. In Chile, GC is the leading cause of cancer death, affecting 20 per 100,000 people and >3,000 deaths/year. Clinical outcomes and response to "one size fits all" therapies are highly heterogeneous and thus a better stratification of patients may aid cancer treatment and response. Study design/methods. The Gastric Cancer Task Force (GCTF) is a Chilean collaborative, non-interventional retrospective study that seeks to stratify gastric adenocarcinomas (GACs) using retrospect clinical outcomes and genomic, epigenomic and protein alterations in a cohort of 200 patients. Tumor samples from the pathology department and the Cancer Center at UC Christus healthcare network at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile will be analyzed using a panel of 143 known cancer genes (Oncomine Comprehensive Assay) at the Center of Excellence of Precision Medicine (CEMP) in Santiago, Chile. Additionally, gene promoter methylation will be performed and selected clinically relevant proteins (e.g. PD-L1, Erb-2, VEGFR2 among others) will be assessed by Tissue Microarray, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) status will also be assessed. Observations will be correlated to 120 clinical parameters, including general patient information, cancer history, laboratory studies, comorbidity index, chemotherapy, targeted therapies, efficacy and follow-up. Discussion. The development of a clinically meaningful classification that encompasses comprehensive clinical and molecular parameters may improve patient treatment, predict clinical outcomes, aid patient selection for clinical trials and offer insights into future preventive and/or therapeutic strategies.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

An Evaluation of the Utility of the ExSpiron Respiratory Variation Monitor During Upper GI Endoscopy...

Biliary Tract DiseasesStomach Neoplasms3 more

Purpose: To assess the utility of a new medical device that monitors a patient's breathing during medical procedures in which a patient is sedated, but not mechanically ventilated. In minor procedures, such as endoscopy (where the doctor examines a patient's digestive tract by a TV camera inserted through the mouth), patients do not require general anesthesia, in which a machine would take over their breathing while they are unconscious for surgery. However, during endoscopic procedures it is sometimes difficult for the anesthesiologist to monitor the patient's breathing-specifically, to monitor changes in breathing patterns and the adequacy of breathing. In endoscopy procedures, the room is darkened, and the patient's mouth is generally occupied by the endoscope. While the anesthesiologist can listen to the patient's breathing sounds with a stethoscope, this type of monitoring can only be done periodically, and there is limited ability to gauge the adequacy of ventilation. This study will use the ExSpiron Respiratory Volume Monitor (RVM), which measures non-invasive minute ventilation (MV), tidal volume (TV) and respiratory rate (RR), in patients undergoing an endoscopic procedure to provide additional information regarding the effects of clinical interventions such as drug administrations or airway maneuvers on the patient's respiratory status. For patients who give informed consent, study participation means that they will have a PadSet consisting of 3 electrodes applied to the chest. Another component, a nasal cannula (a thin clear plastic tube that goes under the nose) will give patients supplemental oxygen, and is standard of care for endoscopy at UVM Medical Center. Patients will then be asked to breathe in and out of a portable spirometer (breath meter) for 30 seconds up to five times. This data will be compared to data recorded by the monitor to confirm that the monitor is recording accurately. The procedure will then go forward in the normal fashion. Patients will be randomly placed into one of two groups. In the first group during the procedure, the anesthesiologist will not be able to see the numbers (MV, TV, and RR) displayed screen of the monitor, so the data will not be used to guide the patient's clinical care. In the second group, the anesthesiologist will be able to see the RVM measurements of MV, TV, and RR to evaluate the effect of the interventions. Monitoring for both groups will continue in the recovery room, until discharge.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

The Predictive Value of Complement C3 in Patients With Advanced Gastric Cancer

Gastric CancerComplement Component Deficiency1 more

This study is designed to investigate whether complement C3 depletion is associated with poor short-term outcomes in postoperative patients with gastric cancer.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Monosialotetrahexosylganglioside Sodium Injection for Prevention Neurotoxicity of mFOLFOX 6 in Advanced...

Gastric Cancer

For gastric patients of Karnofsky scores between 60-80 scores, mFolfox6 is an option for chemotherapy. Neutropenia and oxaliplatin-induced neurotoxicity are the most common adverse effects which even result in discontinue of chemotherapy, especially for patients suffered from heavily acute neurotoxicity. Monosialotetrahexosylganglioside is a component of membrane of nerve cells. Previous phase II clinical trial showed, it can reduce oxaliplatin-induced neurotoxicity(OIN). But it did not certificated by phase III trial. A phase III trial is needed to investigate the effect and safety of monosialotetrahexosylganglioside Sodium Injection for prevention OIN at gastric cancer.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria
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