A Phase IB Study to Determine the Safety and Tolerability of Canakinumab and Tislelizumab in Combination With Nab-Paclitaxel and Gemcitabine in the Neo-adjuvant Treatment of Patients With Pancreatic Cancer

The goal of this Single Arm Phase Ib clinical trial is to test standard of care chemotherapy and anti PD1 and IL1b to evaluate the safety and preliminary toxicity of this quadruplet regimen prior to resection in patients with pancreatic cancer. The main objectives it aims to answer are to:

* Determine the recommended Phase II dose regimen of canakinumab and tislelizumab in combination with gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel in patients with localized pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
* Estimate the proportion of patients who proceed to surgical resection.
* Determine the safety and tolerability of canakimumab in combination with tislelizumab, nab-paclitaxel and gemcitabine
* Assess the preliminary clinical anti-tumor activity of canakimumab in combination with tislelizumab, nab-paclitaxel and gemcitabine
* Assess whether therapy has any impact on surgical options

Participants will have labs drawn, CT scans, and a treatment administered consisting of:

* Gemcitabine
* Nab-paclitaxel
* Canakinumab
* Tislelizumab

The Occurence of Pancreatic Cancer Studied in Association With Newly Diagnosed Diabetes in the Elderly

The aim of this study is to accomplish the early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, in patients over 60 years of age with newly diagnosed diabetes. Only patients with type 2 diabetes are meant to be included. The early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer could be the way to enable efficient cure for the patients.

A Study Evaluating MM-310 in Patients With Solid Tumors

MM-310 is a liposomal formulation of a docetaxel prodrug that targets the EphA2 receptor on cancer cells. Docetaxel is an approved chemotherapeutic drug.This study is a Phase 1 open-label study of MM-310 in patients with solid tumors. In the first part of the study, MM-310 will be assessed as a monotherapy until a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) is established. After an MTD of MM-310 as a monotherapy is established, an expansion cohort and MM-310 in combination with other therapies will be assessed.

Investigator's Initiated Phase II Study for Pancreatic Cancer Patients

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of TL-118 alone or in combination with pancreatic cancer chemotherapy.

Canady Helios Cold Plasma Scalpel Treatment at the Surgical Margin and Macroscopic Tumor Sites

The study designed is to evaluate the safety of Canady Helios™ Cold Plasma Scalpel (CHCPS) in patients with solid tumors with carcinomatosis scheduled to undergo surgical resection for cytoreduction. Patients with stage 4 resectable tumors as decided by a multidisciplinary disease management team may be included if the metastatic disease is non-synchronous (e.g. recurrent colorectal carcinoma with hepatic metastasis amenable for surgical resection).. Plasma is an ionized gas typically generated in high-temperature laboratory conditions. Plasma coagulators are currently used routinely as surgical tools with multiple applications that create temperatures between 37° C to 43°C and cause thermal injury. Earlier studies demonstrated the non-aggressive nature of cold plasma. As evidence accumulates, it is becoming clear that low-temperature cold plasma has an increasing role in biomedical applications.

Prospective Evaluation of a Program for Early Identification of Needs and Multidisciplinary Intervention in Supportive Care in Digestive Oncology

Patients with advanced gastrointestinal (GI) cancers are very often sarcopenic/malnourished at diagnosis (> 60% of cases) and at high risk of rapid clinical deterioration. These patients have important supportive care needs that represent a major challenge for improving treatment tolerance and patient survival and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).

Malnutrition and sarcopenia (muscle wasting and dysfunction) are associated with an increased risk of death, complications from chemotherapy, infections, emergency procedures and hospitalizations, and increased costs of care. Therefore, malnutrition and sarcopenia represent a major clinical target in GI cancers.

Interventions targeting malnutrition/sarcopenia should be implemented as early as possible in patients' pathways, these syndromes being reversible at early stages but not at late stages.

A multidisciplinary assessment at diagnosis and therapeutic approach combining nutritional support and and adapted physical activity (APA) in addition to anticancer treatments should be systematically implemented in patients with advanced GI cancers.

This type of intervention complies with the standards recommended by the National Cancer Institute (INCa) to promote the practice of physical activity during and after treatment in oncology.

Evolution of Body Connection After Surgery

Evaluation of psychological impact of patients after pancreatectomy because of cancer diagnosis. Patients will be evaluated with questionnaires after and before intervention. 3 control groups will be used to compare de psychological impact.

A Study of YL-17231 in Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors

This is a phase 1 open label multicenter study to evaluate the maximum tolerance, safety, tolerance and PK of oral YL-17231 in patients with advanced solid tumors with KRAS mutation, so as to confirm the recommended phase 2 dose of YL-17231 and obtain the preliminary efficacy information of patients with advanced solid tumors with KRAS mutation.

PANFIRE Study: Irreversible Electroporation (IRE) to Treat Locally Advanced Pancreatic Carcinoma

Irreversible electroporation (IRE) is a new, minimal-invasive image-guided treatment method for tumors not amenable for surgical resection or thermal ablation, due to vicinity near vital structures such as vessels and bile ducts. With IRE, multiple electrical pulses are applied to tumorous tissue. These pulses alter the existing transmembrane potential of the cell membranes, and create 'nanopores', after which the cell dies through loss of homeostasis.

The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety of percutaneous IRE in the treatment of patients with locally advanced pancreatic carcinoma (LAPC). Other objectives are feasibility and efficacy of IRE based upon symptomatic response and tumor response.

Fourty patients with histologically confirmed locally advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma (<5cm) will undergo percutaneous irreversible electroporation of the tumor using CT and ultrasound guidance. After IRE, patients will be carefully monitored and any (serious) adverse events are registered. Follow-up will consist of frequent CT scanning, as well as serum CA19.9 tumor marker.

We hypothesize that IRE in the pancreas will induce good symptom palliation and local tumor control, without causing severe complications.

A Phase I/Ib Study of NZV930 Alone and in Combination With PDR001 and /or NIR178 in Patients With Advanced Malignancies.

The purpose of this study was to assess the safety, tolerability, and preliminary anti-tumor activity of experimental medication NZV930 alone and when combined with PDR001 and/or NIR178, in patients with advanced cancers