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Active clinical trials for "Rectal Neoplasms"

Results 91-100 of 1338

Total Neoadjuvant Treatment Combined With Adaptive Radiotherapy for Rectal Cancer

Rectal Cancer

Diarrhea was the most frequently reported severe adverse event in the treatment regime of pre-operative sequential short-course radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy (so called total neo-adjuvant treatment). This study therefore investigates the benefit of on-couch adaptation for locally advanced rectal cancer patients undergoing this treatment regime.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Neoadjuvant Cadonilimab Plus Chemotherapy Following Short-Course Radiotherapy in Locally Advanced...

Locally Advanced Rectal Carcinoma

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the efficacy and safety in patients with locally advanced middle and lower rectal cancer. The main questions it aims to answer are:• Whether Cadonilimab combined with chemotherapy following short-course radiation can improve pathological complete response(pCR) rate? •Are the toxicities of the combination therapy manageable? Participants will be given radiation of 5 Gy for 5 days and then neoadjuvant Cadonilimab combined with modified fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (mFOLFOX6) for 6 cycles. Without progressed disease, total mesorectal excision (TME) or transanal local excision will be performed. If clinical complete response was received, watch and wait strategy is one of choices. Adjuvant Cadonilimab plus mFOLFOX6 for another 6 cycles could be suggested for non-pCR participants,while surveillance is also suitable for pCR ones.

Recruiting37 enrollment criteria

Total Neoadjuvant Therapy Combined With Tislelizumab for Local Advanced of Middle and Low Rectal...

Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

This study is a prospective, randomized, open, controlled, multi-center phase II clinical trial, which included patients with locally advanced low rectal cancer as the research object, and evaluated the application of long-term concurrent chemoradiotherapy combined with tislelizumab versus long-term synchronous Efficacy and safety of chemotherapy and radiotherapy as neoadjuvant therapy for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. The main endpoints of the study were clinical complete response (cCR) (including imaging and endoscopic complete response) and pathological complete response (pathological complete response, pCR). Secondary study endpoints are primary pathological response rate (MPR), objective response rate (ORR), disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival (OS), organ preservation rate (OPR), rectal cancer neoadjuvant therapy score (NAR ), quality of life score (QoL), safety and tolerability. They will be randomly divided into an experimental group (tislelizumab combined with long-term concurrent chemoradiotherapy) and a control group (long-term concurrent chemoradiotherapy) at a ratio of 2:1. Random stratification factors: 1. TNM stage (II/III); 2. Distance from the tumor to the anal verge (≥5cm, <5cm).

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

Immunotherapy in Patients With Early dMMR Rectal Cancer

Cancer of Rectum

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer (1.8 million cases) and the third most common cause of cancer-related death (0.8 million deaths) worldwide in 2018, and rectal cancer accounts for roughly one-third of CRC. The main curative treatment modality for patients with rectal cancer is surgery, often combined with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy (RT). The global recognition of total mesorectal excision (TME), that decreased locoregional recurrence (LRR) by itself, questioned the need for radiotherapy (RT) before or after surgery. Several randomized trials have demonstrated the importance of preoperative RT (short course RT or long course chemo-radiotherapy (CRT)) in reducing LRR, in patients with high-risk rectal cancer. However, RT or CRT does not improve overall survival, and in addition neoadjuvant RT/CRT followed by TME is associated with perioperative morbidity and the risk is increasing with age. Therefore, ongoing trials are testing other strategies, such as the omission of (C)RT or even avoidance of surgery. In May 2022, a presentation with simultaneous NEJM publication showed that 14/14 patients with dMMR rectal cancer obtained complete response after six months (9 cycles every 3 weeks) of immunotherapy (dostarlimab). Thus, the investigators have now become confident that immunotherapy without surgery will be the "new standard", and the investigators will recommend a W&W strategy in patients with rectal cancer obtaining major tumor shrinkage and these patients will be followed carefully with clinical and molecular evaluation (which was not part of the NEJM paper). No patient in the NEJM paper had progressive disease and therefore the investigators recommend a second cycle of immunotherapy (instead of resection in unclear cases) and re-evaluation. The investigators are confident that 1 or 2 cycles of immunotherapy will result in complete radiological, pathological, and molecular response in a substantial number of patients and this short duration of therapy will reduce toxicity and especially drug costs. In conclusion, immunotherapy in patients with dMMR CRC tumors may completely eradicate the primary cancer and regional lymph nodes leading to a possibility for organ-sparing medical treatments, and the investigators are confident that this new strategy of 1 or 2 cycles of immunotherapy will be the future standard of care, and in Denmark the investigators have the chance to monitor these patients closely with clinical and high-level molecular follow-up.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy With PD-1 Inhibitors Combined With SIB-IMRT in the Treatment of Locally...

Rectal Neoplasms

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tislelizumab combined with simultaneous integrated boost intensity-modulated radiotherapy in treating locally advanced rectal cancer. To explore a new PD-1 inhibitor adjuvant chemotherapy model combined with radiotherapy to treat locally advanced rectal cancer.

Recruiting23 enrollment criteria

Complete Versus Partial Preservation of Denonvilliers' Fascia on Urogenital Function in Locally...

Rectal CancerAdvanced Cancer

Total mesorectal resection (TME) is the standard surgical method for locally advanced rectal cancer, which significantly reduces the local recurrence rate. However, the incidence of urogenital dysfunction is higher. Studies found that Denonvilliers' Fascia contains autonomic nerves that may regulate urogenital function, while traditional TME surgery resects part of it. Recent Studies found that complete preservation of Denonvilliers' Fascia could improve urogenital in selected patients with rectal cancer. Locally advanced patient (T3-4 and/or N+, M0) accounts for a high proportion of mid-low rectal cancer. However, whether these patients can benefit from it has not fully been demonstrated. This project conducts a multi-center randomized controlled study to evaluate the effects of complete preservation and partial preservation of Denonvilliers' Fascia on postoperative urogenital function of locally advanced non-anterior mid-low rectal cancer.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Study Evaluating the Tailored Management of Locally-advanced Rectal Carcinoma

Locally Advanced Malignant NeoplasmRectal Carcinoma

Locally advanced rectal carcinoma raise the issue of both the oncological control, local and general, and the therapeutic morbidity. Surgery alone can cure only one out of two patients, radiochemotherapy improves the local control but the metastatic risk remains about 30% with enhanced postoperative morbidity and poor functional results. The tumor response to preoperative treatment is the major prognostic factor which revealed the aggressiveness of the tumor. To this day, there are no biologic predictive markers for tumor response. The purpose of this trial is to tailor the management according to the early tumoral response after short and intensive induction chemotherapy. MRI volumetric tumor response will be used to distinguish between good responders and bad responders. "Very good" responders will be randomized to either immediate surgery or radiochemotherapy followed by surgery (Standard arm: Cap 50).

Recruiting42 enrollment criteria

Preoperative Short-Course Radiation Therapy With PROtons Compared to Photons In High-Risk RECTal...

Rectal Cancer

To investigate a potential toxicity benefit of preoperative radiation therapy with protons compared to conventional photon beam radiation therapy in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer.

Recruiting33 enrollment criteria

Induction Chemotherapy for Locally Recurrent Rectal Cancer

Recurrent Rectal Cancer

This is a multicentre, open-label, parallel arms, phase IIII study that randomises patients with locally recurrent rectal cancer in a 1:1 ratio to receive either induction chemotherapy followed by neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery (experimental arm) or neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery alone (control arm)

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Standard Dose Versus High Dose of Radiotherapy in Rectal Preservation With Chemo-radiotherapy in...

Cancer of Rectum

In recent years, an increasing number of retrospective and prospective observational studies have indicated that a subset of rectal cancer patients may avoid surgery if they can achieve a complete response to chemoradiotherapy. Prospective trials, including the previous Danish Watchful Waiting trials (NCT00952926, NCT02438839) in early rectal cancer have demonstrated high levels of organ preservation with dose-escalation, but it is unclear whether this was primarily due to tumor stage or dose level. The aim of the present study is to investigate if a higher dose of radiotherapy is superior compared to a standard dose in patients with early rectal cancer undergoing chemoradiotherapy with curative intent.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria
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