The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to compare uncovered, partially covered, and fully covered self-expandable metal stents (SEMS) in the palliative treatment of distal malignant biliary obstruction in a Swedish multicenter study.
The main questions it aims to answer is: Is the stent patency rate different depending of stent type? Is the stent patency time different depending of stent type? Is the patient survival different between the groups? Which complications are seen, and do they differ between the groups? Are there different mechanisms behind the stent failure depending on stent type?
Patients will at ERCP, with a guidewire passed through the stenosis in the bile duct, be allocated to either uncovered, partially covered, and fully covered (SEMS). Totally, 450 patients will be recruited, 150 in each study arm, according to the power analysis.
Patients will be followed in a monthly surveillance by a study nurse up to 12 months after stent insertion. Endpoints are: alive after 12 months with a patent stent, death with a patent stent, stent dysfunction with a subsequent intervention i.e. repeated ERCP or PTC = "objective stent failure", stent dysfunction, jaundice or cholangitis, but not intervention has been undertaken due to a poor condition of the patient, Ȭlinical stent failure", the patient has undergone curative surgery or a bilio-enteric by-pass (a gastro-enteroanastomosis or a duodenal stent is not a reason for exclusion), the patient refuses further follow-up.
RATIONALE: Determining how patients makes decisions about participating in a clinical trial may help doctors plan clinical trials in which more patients are willing to participate and are satisfied with their decision to participate.
PURPOSE: This clinical trial is studying how patients with stage II, stage III, or stage IV pancreatic cancer or stage III or stage IV colon cancer or rectal cancer make decisions about participating in a clinical trial.
This is a randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness of an electronic decision aid tool versus a traditional genetic counselor session for multi-gene panel testing for people with ovarian or pancreatic cancer
Malnutrition and loss of muscle mass frequently occur in patients undergoing chemotherapy and can negatively effect therapy outcome. Especially patients with cancer of the gastrointestinal tract are often affected by malnutrition. Therefore, this study aims to examine changes in nutritional status of patients with cancer of the gastrointestinal tract during chemotherapy. Findings of this study will help to improve nutritional treatment of patients undergoing chemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to provide a safety and feasibility basis for future studies addressing the hypothesis that subcutaneous vaccination with dendritic cells loaded with multiple antigenic epitopes expressed by pancreatic tumor in combination with systemic administration of Poly-ICLC (Hiltonol) will induce anti-tumor immunity.
The primary objective of this study is to compare the overall survival of patients with stage IV pancreatic cancer treated with gemcitabine alone or gemcitabine with bavituximab.
The purpose of this study is to increase understanding of women who are at high risk for developing breast cancer. Data from this group will be collected and entered into a registry. This registry serves as a clinical database to support research in prevention, early detection and treatment of breast cancer.
Assess the degree of vascular involvement is crucial in the diagnostic and therapeutic work-up of pancreatic cancer. NCCN resectability classification is used to stratify patients (in resectable, borderline resectable and non resectable) and is based on contrast-enhanced CT scan images. Unfortunately evaluation of imaging tests may rely on some degree of subjective interpretation by observers implying a fundamental variation in patient's treatments and an irreproducibility of different center study results.
This is a multicenter diagnostic study on interobserver agreement on the resectability of pancreatic cancer based upon NCCN criteria.
The primary aim of the study will be the assessment of interobserver variability to define vascular invasion and resectability status on CT scans (according to the last version of the NCCN Classification).
One hundred and thirty eight consecutive patients, able to produce an informed consent, from 18 years of age, with a non-metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma assessed by a contrast-enhanced high-quality CT scan will be enrolled.
69 CT scan studies provided by the centers involved (High volume for pancreatic surgery) will be randomly selected from a pool of 138 of the patients that meet the inclusion criteria. Each study will be independently reviewed by a senior radiologist and a senior surgeon of each center, blinded to patient's clinical history and CT scan report, using NCCN definition of respectability status. A CFR will be filled during the review and send to the study coordinator. The data will be than centrally analyzed to asses interobserver agreement The enrolment phase will last 6 months and the whole study will last 8 months.
This is an open-label, multi-center, multi-national, non-randomized rollover study designed to allow continued access to napabucasin for patients who have participated in a Boston Biomedical-sponsored study and are being treated with napabucasin (monotherapy or combination) and who are deriving continued clinical benefit in the parent study at the time of closure.
The objective of the study is to prospectively assess the use and treatment outcomes of nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma in the Netherlands. Additional objectives are to monitor the incidence and reversibility of neuropathy during treatment, to assess the patient's Quality of life when treated with nab-paclitaxel/gemcitabine and to evaluate the use of resources that come with treating metastatic pancreatic cancer.