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Active clinical trials for "Liver Neoplasms"

Results 671-680 of 1144

EF5 and Motexafin Lutetium in Detecting Tumor Cells in Patients With Abdominal or Non-Small Cell...

Advanced Adult Primary Liver CancerCarcinoma of the Appendix69 more

This clinical trial is studying the amount of EF5 and motexafin lutetium present in tumor cells and/or normal tissues of patients with abdominal (such as ovarian, colon, or stomach cancer) or non-small cell lung cancer. EF5 may be effective in measuring oxygen in tumor tissue. Photosensitizing drugs such as motexafin lutetium are absorbed by tumor cells and, when exposed to light, become active and kill the tumor cells. Knowing the level of oxygen in tumor tissue and the level of motexafin lutetium absorbed by tumors and normal tissue may help predict the effectiveness of anticancer therapy

Terminated22 enrollment criteria

Bortezomib in Treating Patients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Liver Cancer)

Adult Primary Hepatocellular CarcinomaAdvanced Adult Primary Liver Cancer2 more

This phase II trial is studying how well bortezomib works in treating patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (liver cancer) that cannot be removed with surgery. Bortezomib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking the enzymes necessary for their growth.

Completed44 enrollment criteria

Chemoembolization in Treating Patients With Primary Liver Cancer or Metastases to the Liver

Liver CancerMetastatic Cancer

RATIONALE: Chemoembolization kills tumor cells by blocking the blood flow to the tumor and keeping chemotherapy drugs near the tumor. PURPOSE: Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of chemoembolization in treating patients who have primary liver cancer or metastases to the liver that cannot be surgically removed.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Oxaliplatin in Treating Patients With Liver Cancer

Adult Primary Hepatocellular CarcinomaAdvanced Adult Primary Liver Cancer2 more

Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of oxaliplatin in treating patients who have unresectable, recurrent or metastatic liver cancer. Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Hepatocellular Cancer (HCC) Screening in Zhongshan City

Liver Neoplasms

All participants in the selected communities will be tested for HBsAg by using serum samples. Among those who are positive for HBsAg, further clinical work-ups including AFP test and ultrasonography for liver exam will be performed. High risk group will be selected according to the definition. HCC diagnosis will be determined according to imaging and/or biopsy result. Repeated check-ups will be performed in 6-months among HBsAg positive group and 3-years among HBsAg negative group. All subjects in the control arm (control communities) will be followed by record linkage to Cancer Register and Population Register.

Active7 enrollment criteria

Precision Medicine for Liver Tumours With Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Whole Genome...

Liver CancerLiver Metastasis Colon Cancer

This will be a prospective, observational, cohort study to determine the impact of integrated diagnostics using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging, whole genome sequencing and digital pathology on intended patient management for liver cancer patients referred for liver resection. Participants with primary or secondary liver cancer will be recruited from Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in Basingstoke or Oxford University Hospitals NHSFoundation Trust in Oxford. The incidence of treatable liver tumours is on the rise globally, driven by obesity, viral hepatitis and metastases from colorectal cancers. Survival rates can be improved with optimised allocation of treatment options including surgical resection, radiofrequency ablation, embolisation, chemotherapy and targeted molecular therapies (including immunotherapy). The key motivation of this study is to help patients access the most suitable treatment combinations, based on integrating clinical, radiological and genomic data. A similar integrated approach, integrating radiology and pathology, has been shown to improve outcomes in breast cancer care. Detailed pathologic analysis of the surgical specimen from breast carcinoma biopsy provides valuable feedback to the radiologist, establishes the completeness of surgical intervention, and generates predictive information for therapeutic decisions. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has discovered cancer driver mutations and the complex molecular profile of liver cancer. In many metastatic solid tumours, WGS has been used to identify a significant patient population (31%) who present with a biomarker that predicts sensitivity to a drug and lacked any known resistance biomarkers for the same drug. Identifying which patients possess druggable mutations will allow clinicians to make the optimal treatment decisions. The next challenge is integrating WGS into scalable clinical practice

Active4 enrollment criteria

Clinical Trial of Standard Versus Goal-Directed Perioperative Fluid Management (GDT) for Patients...

Liver Cancer

The purpose of this study is to help us learn what is the best amount of fluid to administer to patients during liver surgery. Patients will receive either an amount for this surgery based on weight, blood pressure, heart rate and urine output or an amount guided by a computerized system (FloTrac) that helps doctors know how much fluid each patient needs. The FloTrac calculates the amount of fluid patients needs on a minute-to-minute basis, based on real time information like blood pressure, pulse and the ability of the heart and blood vessels to maintain normal vital signs.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Intra-hepatic Chemotherapy in Patient With Non-resectable Liver Metastases From Breast Cancer

Metastatic Breast CancerLiver Metastases

This is a phase II trial evaluating intra-hepatic chemotherapy with oxaliplatin every second week in combination with systemic capecitabine and in patients with a HER2-positive tumour in combination with trastuzumab (Herceptin®) in patient with non-resectable liver metastases from breast cancer. Only patients without extrahepatic disease are included.

Completed29 enrollment criteria

A Phase I Study of Isolated Hepatic Portal and Arterial Perfusion (IHP) With Escalating Dose Melphalan...

Liver NeoplasmsNeoplasm Metastasis

Patients with unresectable primary or metastatic cancer confined to the liver will undergo a 1 hour hyperthermic isolated hepatic perfusion (IHP) via the portal vein and hepatic artery with escalating dose melphalan. Patients eligible for this protocol are those with non-colorectal histologies and those with colorectal cancer previously treated with intra-arterial FUDR. Hepatic and systemic toxicity, response to treatment, duration of response, and survival will be followed.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Added Value of Contrast-enhanced Ultrasonography for Percutaneous Radiofrequency Ablation

Radiofrequency AblationUltrasonography1 more

Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS)-CT/MRI fusion imaging substantially improved the visibility of small tumors that were inconspicuous on both US and US-CT/MRI fusion imaging, contributing to successful percutaneous radiofrequency ablation.

Completed8 enrollment criteria
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