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Showing 1-8 of 8 trials
NCT05733689
This is a phase 1b prospective, single arm, open-label trial determining the efficacy and feasibility of using a response-guided approach to help guide neoadjuvant chemotherapy in subjects with Stage IB, II or Stage III adenocarcinoma of the stomach or gastroesophageal junction (GEA).
NCT07282912
This is a randomized, open label, single-center, phase 2, randomized controlled trial of sequential cytoreductive intervention versus standard of care therapy for patients with intervenable oligometastatic (stage IV) cancer of the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract and undetectable ctDNA at the time of randomization after a three-month induction chemotherapy period.
NCT07176312
The ZANGEA trial is a open-label, single arm, multicenter phase II trial assessing the efficacy of zanidatamab in combination with pembrolizumab and chemotherapy in patients with metastatic gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA). The patients need to be previously untreated in the palliative setting and tested positive for HER2 and PD-L1.
NCT06529822
This is a phase 1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety, feasibility and immunogenicity of a personalized cancer vaccine strategy in patients with solid tumors and molecular residual disease. The hypothesis of the trial is that synthetic long peptide personalized cancer vaccines will be safe and capable of generating measurable neoantigen-specific T-cell responses enabling ctDNA clearance. The personalized cancer vaccines are composed of synthetic long peptides corresponding to prioritized cancer neoantigens and will be co-administered with poly-ICLC.
NCT06245356
The goal of this clinical trial is to test the safety of the trifluridine/tipiracil as replacement of fluoropyrimidines based chemotherapy as first line metastatic colorectal or gastroesophageal cancer regimens in patients with dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) deficiency. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is this alternative chemotherapy option a better option in term of safety for this type of patients? * Does the combination of treatments improves the overall safety? * Does the combination of treatments improves the progression-free survival, overall survival, objective response rate and disease control rate? * Does the combination of treatment have an effect on quality of life? Participants will: * Receive the trifluridine/tipiracil with oxaliplatin every 14 days, associated with: * Panitumumab or bevacizumab for colorectal adenocarcinomas * Nivolumab or trastuzumab for gastroesophageal adenocarcinomas. * Have a CT-Scan every 2 months until disease progression * Complete Health-related quality of life questionnaire every 2 months for a maximum of 6 months * Participate to the optional translational research: Blood samples fo DPYD genotyping and pharmacokinetic analysis
NCT05299476
his study was a single-arm, open, single-center Phase ii clinical trial to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of CAPOX+ bevacizumab + tislelizumab in first-line treatment of ADVANCED gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma with CPS \< 5. This study targeted advanced gastric cancer patients who could not undergo radical treatment, who had not received systemic therapy before, or who had recurrence and metastasis more than 6 months after the end of adjuvant therapy. The 6-month progression-free survival (PFS) rate will be used as the primary outcome indicator, and approximately 30 subjects will be enrolled. Subject will receive CAPOX+ bevacizumab + tislelizumab continuously for a treatment cycle of 3 weeks after fully informed and signing informed consent, oxaliplatin will be stopped after 4-8 cycles, and other drugs will continue to be used until the treatment interruption event specified in the plan occurs. Post-treatment follow-up for safety and survival will continue after completion of treatment, and follow-up for tumor progression will also be conducted after completion of treatment for subjects who have not finished treatment for a cause of disease progression/death. After the subjects were enrolled in the study, safety visits were conducted for each treatment cycle D1 before medication. Imaging will be performed every 2 cycles from the first year of treatment to assess efficacy, and every 3 cycles after 1 year until treatment ends, informed consent is withdrawn, or death.
NCT05986227
The addition of immunotherapy to chemotherapy improves outcomes in patients with HER2-negative gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA), and investigators aim to explore its role in the perioperative setting. Moreover, optimizing the timing schedule of these two therapies is critical when balancing efficacy and safety. This Chinese, multicenter, open-label phase 1b/2 trial will evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of perioperative folinic acid, fluoro-uracil, oxali-platin (FOLFOX), and toripalimab (JS001, a novel PD-1 inhibitor) in combination at various schedules in the neoadjuvant setting in patients with HER2-negative resectable GEA: three cycles each in Arm A: FOLFOX (D1, q2w) followed by toripalimab (D3, 3 mg/kg, q2w); Arm B: concurrent FOLFOX (D1, q2w) combined with toripalimab (D1, 3 mg/kg, q2w); Arm C: toripalimab (D1, 3 mg/kg, q2w) followed by FOLFOX (D3, q2w); Arm D: FOLFOX (D1, q2w) alone. The primary end-point is the dose-limiting toxicity in Phase 1b and the pathological complete response rate in Phase 2; secondary end-points include major pathologic response, disease-free survival, and event-free survival.A fixed sample size of 126 patients is used in this study, with a safety run-in period (n = 6) and cohort expansion period (n = 24), a dropout rate of 5% within 12 months of follow-up. Each arm receives three cycles of FOLFOX (D1, q2w) followed by 15 cycles of toripalimab (D1, 240 mg, q3w) in the neoadjuvant setting. Pre-treatment biopsies, post-resection specimens, serial liquid biopsy, and gut microbiota samples on treatment will be collected to explore the biomarkers' predictive value on diverse schedule efficacy and safety.
NCT01045421
This is an open-label, multicenter study with a phase 1 dose escalation portion and a 2-stage, phase 2 portion, investigating MLN8237 (alisertib) in patients with advanced nonhematological malignancies.