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Active clinical trials for "Rectal Neoplasms"

Results 651-660 of 1338

Laparoscopy-Assisted Transanal Endoscopy Rectosigmoid Resection for Rectal Cancer

Adenocarcinoma of the Rectum

Transanal Endoscopic Rectosigmoid Resection with Laparoscopic Assistance was developed at Massachusetts General Hospital and performed successfully to remove cancer of the lower rectum. Based on the outcomes, the research doctors believe that this investigational surgery may be as safe and effective as standard laparoscopic or open surgery performed to remove rectal cancer, may facilitate the operation and reduce the size of the abdominal incisions. In this research study, the investigators are looking to see if this investigational procedure is a safe and effective approach to remove rectal cancer of the mid and lower rectum.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

A Study on the Timing of FOLFOX for Patients With Operable, Node Positive Rectal Cancer

Operable T2-3N+M0 Rectal Cancer (Stage III)

This study is proposed to evaluate whether giving part of the chemotherapy prior to radiotherapy and surgery (as opposed to standard of care, which involves giving all the chemotherapy after radiotherapy and surgery) for patients with node positive operable rectal cancer will result in higher patient compliance to chemotherapy.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

A Phase I Study of Bavituximab, Capecitabine, and Radiation for the Treatment of Rectal Adenocarcinoma...

Rectal Adenocarcinoma

This is a phase I study incorporating bavituximab into the care of patients with rectal adenocarcinoma simultaneously treated with capecitabine and radiation therapy. There is no reference therapy as we are trying to identify the MTD of bavituximab in this combination.

Completed34 enrollment criteria

Preoperative CRT With Temozolomide Plus Capecitabine in Rectal Cancer

Rectal Cancer

The investigators planned a phase I study of preoperative CRT with capecitabine plus temozolomide inpatients with locally advanced resectable rectal cancer: 1) the role of temozolomide as a radiosensitizer has been well established, 2) hypermethylation (or low expression) of MGMT promoter is associated with colorectal carcinogenesis, can be found in 20~40% of colorectal cancer patients, and this proportion could be adequate for validation as its role of predictive biomarker, and 3) temozolomide can be additive or synergistic because radiotherapy is now essential in the treatment of rectal cancer.

Completed24 enrollment criteria

A Trial of Robotic-assisted Versus Laparoscopic Abdominoperineal Resection for Treating Low Rectal...

Rectal Cancer

In this study, the investigators assessed the difference in efficacy and safety among robotic-assisted versus laparoscopic abdominoperineal resection for patients with low rectal cancer.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Phase II Study of Up-front Chemotherapy and Neo-adjuvant Short-course Radiotherapy for Resectable...

Rectal Carcinoma

Phase II study of up-front chemotherapy and neo-adjuvant shortcourse radiotherapy for resectable rectal carcinoma. Study Design: Phase II, open-label, single-arm, multi-centre study. STUDY PRODUCT,DOSE,ROUTE,REGIMEN AND DURATION OF ADMINISTRATION: Neoadjuvant Treatment (pre-operative chemo-radiotherapy regimen): FOLFOX4* 2 cycles (WK1+WK3) - Tomotherapy** (WK5) - FOLFOX4* 2 cycles (WK7+WK9) * Oxaliplatin 85 mg/m2 iv: day 1 Levofolinate 100 mg/m2 iv: day 1-2 5-fluorouracil 400 mg/m2 iv in bolus and 600 mg/m2 iv infusion over 22h: day 1-2 Every cycle will last 2 weeks (approximately 48 hours of treatment infusion and 12 days of rest). ** 25 Gy in 5 consecutive fractions, one fraction per day in 5 days on CTV (Clinical Target Volume) at the isodose of the 95% of the total dose. The treatment plan will be elaborated at the work-station dedicated to the Helicoidal Tomotherapy. The treatment could be planned also with linear accelerator with IGRT-IMRT technique or VMAT technique. Restaging (week 11) Surgery (week 12-16) with Total Mesorectal Excision (TME) End Of Treatment (week 16-32) Adjuvant therapy (The maximum interval between surgery and start of adjuvant therapy should be 8 weeks): FOLFOX4* 8 cycles (every 2 weeks) Study Duration: about 5 years. Enrollment period: 36 months. Treatment period: about 8 months. Follow-up: 1 year. NUMBER OF SUBJECTs: · Step A: a maximum of 6 patients. 6 evaluable patients are needed to assess toxicity. If 1 toxicity resulting in discontinuation of treatment will be observed in 6 patients, the treatment can be considered safe (with a confidence > 90%). If 2 or more toxicity resulting in discontinuation of treatment on 6 patients, the study will be stopped because not safe and another type of radiotherapy schedule must be designed. · Step B: a total of 50 patients is required to be recruited in 2 years (including patients enrolled in Step A). The goal is to achieve a proportion of at least 15% of patients with a complete pathological response with the new radiochemotherapeutic treatment.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

CPI-613 and Fluorouracil in Treating Patients With Metastatic Colorectal Cancer That Cannot Be Removed...

Mucinous Adenocarcinoma of the ColonMucinous Adenocarcinoma of the Rectum14 more

This pilot phase I trial studies the side effects and best dose of CPI-613 when given together with fluorouracil in treating patients with colorectal cancer that has spread to other parts of the body and cannot be removed by surgery. CPI-613 may kill tumor cells by turning off their mitochondria. Mitochondria are used by tumor cells to produce energy and are the building blocks needed to make more tumor cells. By shutting off these mitochondria, CPI-613 deprives the tumor cells of energy and other supplies that they need to survive and grow in the body. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as fluorouracil, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Giving CPI-613 with fluorouracil may kill more tumor cells.

Completed38 enrollment criteria

Safety Study of Capecitabine With Radiation in Elderly Rectal Cancer

Rectal Neoplasms

This phase I study is designed to determine the maximum tolerant dose of capecitabine when used in preoperative concurrent chemo-radiation for locally advanced rectal patients over 75 years old.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Capecitabine in the Perioperative Treatment of Rectal Cancer

Rectal Cancer

This study compares capecitabine with standard 5-FU in the perioperative treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

First Line Treatment by FOLFIRINOX for Patients With a Rectum Cancer With Synchronous Non Resectable...

Adenocarcinoma of Rectum

The FOLFIRINOX protocol seems a promising protocol as attack treatment of a rectum cancer, with an objective response rate of about 70 %. This phase II is to investigate if this systematic attack chemotherapy could control at the same time the rectal tumor and the synchronous metastasis without compromising secondarily the tumor or the metastasis resection or a radiochemotherapy administration. The main objective of the trial is to investigate the tumoral control rate at 4 months, according to the RECIST criteria (version 1.1). The secondary objectives are: safety of the treament, rate of local failure and local complication (occlusion, important bleedings, resistant pains with morphinic treatment, perforation), survival without local failure (radiological or clinical progression of the rectal cancer or local complication), rectal tumor response rate (CT scan, MRI and endocopy), metastasis response rate, disease free survival after complete resection (of primitive tumor and metastases), progression free survival (local or distal), overall survival, quality of life (QLQ-C30 + CR 29).

Completed20 enrollment criteria
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