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Active clinical trials for "Liver Neoplasms"

Results 821-830 of 1144

Combined Immunotherapy and Targeted Therapy for Advanced Liver Cancer

Advanced Liver Cancer

Liver cancer is a common malignant tumor in China, and its incidence rate ranks third and remains high. The treatment of liver cancer has made some progress in recent years, mainly the progress of radical treatment such as surgery and ablation. For liver cancer, due to the emergence of molecularly targeted drugs such as sorafenib and immunological checkpoint inhibitors, the systemic therapeutic effect of advanced liver cancer is improved, and the curative effect is further improved. In recent years, immunotherapy has become one of the clinical treatment options for cancer. T lymphocytes are a cell with cell killing ability in the immune system, and programmed death factor 1 (PD-1) is an important inhibitory receptor on the surface of T lymphocytes. It is known that the ligands of PD-1 are PD-L1 and PD-L2, and studies have found that a variety of tumor cells have high expression of PD-L1 ligand on the surface. At present, clinical research on target drugs for PD-1 has included dozens of solid tumors or hematological tumors. The results of clinical studies that have been completed and the interim results of some studies indicate that anti- PD-1 antibody drugs are more effective and safer than previous treatments. Patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) often undergo liver cancer resection, but the recurrence rate can reach 70% to 100%, which seriously affects the treatment outcome and long-term survival rate. Early recurrence of liver cancer is mainly related to the invasiveness of the tumor. Microvascular invasion, non-anatomical hepatectomy, AFP greater than 32 ng/ml, tumor diameter greater than 5 cm, and incomplete tumor capsule are risk factors for recurrence within 2 years after surgery. Hence, it is necessary to determine the risk factors for HCC recurrence and the markers for continuous monitoring of anti-tumor response before and after surgery. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) is an integral part of "liquid biopsy" and has great potential to change the current treatment modality in the cancer field. CTCs are derived from solid tumors and are associated with hematogenous metastasis. Therefore, analyzing the level of CTC has clinical guiding significance. For liver cancer patients, overall survival (OS) tended to be poorer in patients with CTCs. Although surgical treatment of liver cancer has benefited most patients with liver cancer, monitoring postoperative recurrence, further improving the long-term prognosis of liver cancer, postoperative detection of CTCs and other related indicators, combined with targeted, immune and other related treatments for further study. It is expected to receive 100 patients (50 treatment groups, 50 control groups). Patients who underwent immunotherapy after surgery were assigned to the immunotherapy group, and patients who were not treated with sorafenib after surgery were classified as the control group. All patients underwent 7 CTCs tests (immunomagnetic beads negative enrichment-targeted PCR) before, 7 days after surgery and 1st, 3rd, 6th, 9th, and 12th postoperatively. All patients were observed from the observation period. After the liver cancer resection, the patient was observed to have died, lost to follow-up or the end of the study.

Unknown status29 enrollment criteria

TACE, Sorafenib and PD-1 Monoclonal Antibody in the Treatment of HCC

Hepatocellular CarcinomaLiver Neoplasms6 more

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fourth most common cause of cancer-related death that ranks sixth in terms of incident cases, with an overall 5 years survival of 18%. Despite a significant improvement in treatment strategy, the overall survival of HCC remains low due to high recurrence, progressive liver dysfunction and the high fatality of the disease. Surgical resection has been applied in a number of patients; however, surgery has been associated with a high incidence of recurrence (approximately 70% within 5 years). TACE is generally applied on intermediate-stage HCC. However, TACE is not satisfied with improving overall survival. Therefore, there is an urgent need for effective treatment for these patients. At present, the overall objective response rate (ORR) of single or sequential therapy is not satisfied, and the over survival (OS) improvement is not ideal. Therefore, combined therapy maybe the good choice for patients with advanced HCC. This study focuses on the in-operable, BCLC-B/C HCC patients. Through the combination of local therapy (TACE), anti-angiogenic therapy (Sorafenib), and immunotherapy (PD-1 monoclonal antibody), it is expected to change the tumor microenvironment, restore the immune response, strengthen the anti-tumor effect of various treatments, and improve the therapeutic efficacy in patients with BCLC-B/C HCC.

Unknown status40 enrollment criteria

HAIC Combined With Bevacizumab and Toripalimab for Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinama

Hepatocellular CarcinomaBevacizumab3 more

This is an open-label, single-arm clinical study to preliminarily observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy of oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin synchronous combined with Bevacizumab and Toripalimab as the first-line therapy for advanced HCC.

Unknown status20 enrollment criteria

A Prospective, Multicenter Clinical Trial of Safety and Effectiveness of Nanosecond Knife Ablation...

Liver Cancer

This is a prospective, multi-center, single-arm clinical trial. Four hospitals with national medical clinical trial institution qualifications are selected as clinical trial centers. Qualified participants will receive nanosecond pulse ablation therapy according to the routine procedures. The results will be recorded according to the requirements of the primary and secondary efficacy indicators. After then, statistical comparisons of effectiveness and safety of the product will be made according to groups.

Unknown status20 enrollment criteria

GP96 Heat Shock Protein-Peptide Complex Vaccine in Treating Patients With Liver Cancer

Liver Cancer

This trial is to further study the safety and effectiveness of autologous gp96 treatment of liver cancer on the basis of preliminary work

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Study Comparing Radio Frequency Ablation Plus Chemotherapy and Chemotherapy Alone in Patients With...

Colorectal Cancer Liver Metastasis

To date no prospective trials have been completed that demonstrated whether RFA is an effective adjunct to systemic chemotherapy (target therapy) with respect to advantages in overall survival compared with chemotherapy (target therapy) alone. The primary objective of this trial is to determine overall survival for patients with colorectal cancer liver metastasis are treated with radiofrequency ablation plus chemotherapy ± target therapy, compared to chemotherapy ± target therapy only.

Unknown status16 enrollment criteria

Study of Activated CIK Armed With Bispecific Antibody for Advanced Liver Cancer

Advanced Liver Cancer

This is a phase II Randomized comparison clinical trial of activated CIK armed with anti-CD3-MUC1/CEA/EpCAM/GPC3 bispecific antibody for advanced liver cancer. And the aim of this research is to study the clinical efficacy and safety of activated CIK armed with anti-CD3-MUC1/CEA/EpCAM/GPC3 bispecific antibody for liver cancer.

Unknown status33 enrollment criteria

Clinical Study of Targeted Cryoablation Therapy in the Treatment of Hepatic Carcinoma

Liver Neoplasms

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of targeted cryoablation therapy for hepatic carcinoma.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Anlotinib in the Treatment of Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC)

Cancer of Liver

This is a prospective, one-arm, exploratory clinical study to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of Anlotinib hydrochloride capsules in patients with advanced liver cancer.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria

Dose Escalation and Dose Expansion Phase I Study to Assess the Safety and Clinical Activity of Multiple...

Colon Cancer Liver Metastasis

SHRINK (Standard cHemotherapy Regimen and Immunotherapy with NKR-2) is an open-label Phase I study to assess the safety and clinical activity of multiple administrations of autologous NKR-2 cells administered concurrently with a standard chemotherapy treatment (FOLFOX) in potentially resectable liver metastases from colorectal cancer. The trial will test three dose levels. At each dose, the patients will receive three successive administrations, two weeks apart, NKR-2 cells. The study will enroll up to 36 patients (dose escalation and expansion phases).

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria
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