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Found 9 Actively Recruiting clinical trials

A

RECRUITING

The aim is to describ rare primary hepatic cancers clinical, histological and radiological features, to obtain a biological tumor and blood collection, and to evaluate the efficacy of treatments received in clinical practice in order to determine optimal therapeutic sequences.

18+ yearsAll Genders
40 locations
B

RECRUITING

Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) has become an increasing bariatric procedure. The most common complication is gastric leak from the staple line, observed in approximately 3% of cases, and can result in long and incapacitating treatment. The diameter of the bougie used to calibrate the remnant stomach could impact the rate of gastric leak, a higher diameter being correlated with a lower risk of leak, without lowering long-term weight loss. The aim of this prospective randomized trial is to compare the outcomes of LSG according to the use of a standard care bougie calibre or 48-Fr on postoperative gastric leak and mid-term weight loss.

18-70 yearsAll GendersNA
12 locations
E

RECRUITING

Multicentre randomized non-inferiority trial comparing cotrimoxazole to standard antibiotic therapy for enterobacterial VAP. Selection of patients will be done by physicians in ICU. All clinically suspected VAP will be confirmed with a lung sample (preferably bronchoalveolar lavage or protected distal specimen, otherwise endotracheal aspiration). Patients with a microbiologically confirmed VAP due to an Enterobacteriaceae susceptible to cotrimoxazole and at least one antibiotic of the empiric antibiotic therapy (based on international recommendations) will be included. After written informed consent, they will be randomized (1:1), using a computer-generated randomization scheme of various-sized blocks, stratified by presence of septic shock at VAP diagnosis and by presence of COVID-19 pneumonia on ICU admission, through a centralized 24 hours internet service (CleanWEB™) to cotrimoxazole, or best standard of care (either a beta-lactam or a fluoroquinolone), after randomization for a total duration of 7 days (including empiric initial appropriate treatment). Posology and modalities of antibiotic administration will be optimized based on most recent recommendations for ICU patients. Because antibiotic therapy will be variable in the control group, single or double blind is not appropriate. Daily follow-up until death or ICU discharge or day 28 will be performed (vital status, antibiotic therapy, new infection, Clostridium-difficile infection). Clinical (arterial blood gas, temperature, haematology, tracheal secretions) and radiological cure (chest X-ray) will be assessed at Day 7. Systematic MDR bacteria screening will be performed weekly and at ICU discharge. Vital status will be assessed at day 90. Alive patients leaving ICU before 90 days will be contacted by phone (if discharge at home) or by interview at hospital (if transferred in a different ward). Assessment of the clinical and radiological cure by an independent committee (1 specialist in infectious disease and 1 intensivist), blinded of the randomization arm (PROBE methodology).

18+ yearsAll GendersPHASE3
30 locations
L

RECRUITING

The goal of this observational study is to identify and describe the clinical characteristics, health status, socio-economic impacts and quality of life of patients alive for three years after diagnosis of metastatic Lung cancer and no longer receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy. The main question is to identify the needs of these patients in terms of health status (impact of cancer treatments, incidence of new diseases, cardiovascular, diabetes, second cancers), socio-economic aspects, quality of life and return to employment. Participants will be asked to answer quality of life questionnaires at the time of inclusion and 6 and 12 months after inclusion and then, every year up to 5 years in this study. They will be followed regularly, in consultations, according to the usual practices of the physicians in each participating center.

18+ yearsAll Genders
46 locations
P

RECRUITING

Squamous cell carcinoma of the anus is still a rare disease but its incidence increases mostly due to its association with human papillomavirus (HPV). When localized, the standard treatment combines radiotherapy and chemotherapy with 5FU and mitomycin-C. Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) achieves a good outcome for early stage tumors (T1-T2 tumors without nodal involvement), but more advanced tumors (T3-T4 or N1) are associated with a dismal prognosis. About 35 % of such patients relapse within two years after the end of treatment Recently, for metastatic or recurrent tumors after chemoradiotherapy, a chemotherapy combining docetaxel, cisplatin and 5FU (modified DCF protocol) has given very good results with a median overall survival of 39.2 months in 2 French trials (Epitopes HPV01 and 02). Our idea is to propose a new strategy , associating this chemotherapy (mDCF) followed by chemoradiotherapy to improve efficacy of the treatment for patients with locally advanced anal cancers. To this end, The principal investigator propose a national, multicenter, randomized phase 3 clinical trial to compare induction chemotherapy with mDCF followed by chemoradiotherapy versus standard chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced anal canal cancer. the efficacy of the treatment will be evaluated by comparing disease-related event-free survival at 2 years according to the type of treatment. Other endpoints will also be evaluated such as overall survival and colostomy-free survival, treatment tolerability, response rate and quality of life. This trial will be offered to patients over 18 years of age with locally advanced anal cancer without metastasis (T3-4 or N1). It is open to patients over 75 years of age subject to a favorable evaluation by an oncogeriatrician. It is also open to immunocompromised patients (HIV+) if their immunity is well controlled under antiretroviral treatment.The standard chemoradiotherapy treatment consists of 33 sessions of radiation, one session per day from Monday to Friday for 6.5 weeks. It is combined with chemotherapy that includes mitomycin during the first and fifth weeks of radiation therapy, as well as capecitabine that are taken on the days of radiation therapy.In the experimental arm, this chemoradiotherapy treatment is preceded by 4 sessions of mDCF chemotherapy performed every 2 weeks.After treatment, patients are followed up at 8 weeks, then every 4 months for 2 years, and every 6 months for the last year with clinical examination and imaging (CT and MRI).

18+ yearsAll GendersPHASE3
114 locations
P

RECRUITING

The objective of the study is to prospectively generate real-life data in patients aged ≥70 years treated in first line for a thoracic tumor (Non-Small-Cell Lung Carcinoma) according to best standard of care as defined by the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO). This cohort will aim to: * characterize participants in terms of geriatrics, biology and carcinology * describe the treatment modalities by stage, as well as the results in terms of efficacy, safety and impact on quality of life. At the same time, exploratory sub-cohorts will be identified including participants treated uniformly with the same molecule, and/or the same innovative strategy. Participants will be followed in accordance with investigator's usual clinical practice at the corresponding site. They will be asked to: * visit the clinic as per physician's request for checkups and tests for assessing general condition and clinical efficacy and tolerance of current treatment. * perform the necessary regular para-clinical examinations (lab testing, imaging, re-biopsy). * provide blood samples for bio-bank repository * perform assessments specific to older adults * answer three quality of life questionnaires

70+ yearsAll GendersPHASE4
41 locations
R

RECRUITING

Colorectal cancer occurs mainly in elderly patients. Recent estimation showed that in France more than 50% of the patients diagnosed with a colorectal cancer are 70 years old or more. Adjuvant chemotherapy has demonstrated a benefit on disease-free survival and overall survival after a stage III colon cancer resection. Nevertheless adjuvant chemotherapy is poorly used in elderly patients. Prognostic improvement with chemotherapy based on 5FU is suggested by a post-hoc analysis of randomized prospective clinical trial. But elderly patients in this study were highly selected and patients older than 80 represented only 0.7% of the total population. Thus, there is still a concern about the benefit of adjuvant 5FU-based chemotherapy in very elderly unselected patients. The recommended treatment for stage III adjuvant chemotherapy is a combination of fuoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin. Nevertheless oxaliplatin did not demonstrated survival advantage in elderly patients. Altogether there are still two matters of debate: * First, is there a benefit of fluoropyrimidine-based adjuvant chemotherapy for unfit elderly patients? * Second, is there a benefit of oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy for fit elderly patients? The aim of this randomized phase III study is to evaluate the benefit for disease-free survival of adjuvant chemotherapy in elderly patient and which chemotherapy. The elderly patient population will be dichotomized into two groups according to physician's choice after a multidisciplinary evaluation involving a geriatrician, with two different randomization assignments. The patients with an expected life-expectancy below 4 years according Lee score are excluded of this study. Some biological tumour abnormalities are more frequently observed in elderly (i.e. mismatch repair deficiency), therefore an evaluation of specific biological prognostic factors is needed in elderly population.

75+ yearsAll GendersPHASE3
140 locations
S

RECRUITING

Multicentre, prospective, open-label randomized controlled superiority trial with stratification on the presence of neurological symptoms at inclusion and on the presence/absence of risk factors for central pontine myelinolysis (chronic alcohol abuse, malnutrition, serum potassium \< 3.0 mmol/L). Patients in ICU with severe hyponatremia defined by SNa \< 115 mmol/L or SNa \< 120 mmol/L in the presence of neurological symptoms (convulsions, stupor defined by a Glasgow score \<12 or signs of brain herniation) and a normal or decreased extracellular fluid volume will be included. After written informed consent, they will be randomized (1:1), using a computer-generated randomization scheme of various-sized blocks, stratified by the presence of neurological symptoms at inclusion (seizures, stupor defined as Glasgow score \<12 or signs of brain herniation) and on the presence/absence of risk factors for central pontine myelinolysis (chronic alcohol abuse \[defined according to World Health Organization definition\], malnutrition \[BMI\<20.5 or weight loss \>5% in 3 months\], serum potassium \< 3.0 mmol/L), through a centralized 24-hour Internet service (CleanWEB™), to receive standard hyponatremic treatment alone or standard hyponatremic treatment and DDAVP 4 μg/ml IV, after randomisation and for a total duration of 48 hours. Since administration of DDAVP leads to an important decrease in urine output and increase in urine osmolarity which are clinically obvious very rapidly, a single or double blind trial is not appropriate. However, all investigators will be unaware of aggregate outcomes during the study and brain MRI imaging will be performed and analyzed blinded to the randomization group

18+ yearsAll GendersPHASE3
12 locations
S

RECRUITING

Colorectal cancer is the 3rd most common cancer in France and the 2nd cause of death from cancer. Between 30 to 60% of patients develop limited or predominant liver metastases. Surgical resection of these metastases, only curative treatment is not immediately possible in 10-15% of cases. In unresectable patients, current palliative treatments are based on systemic chemotherapy associated or not with the targeted therapies (anti-EGFR (panitumumab), anti-VEGF (bevacizumab)). In this patient population, special attention was paid to intensified treatment regimens in order to improve their efficiency and improving the tumoral response rate, the intensity of the response and its earliness correlate with improved overall and progression-free survival. The intra-arterial use of oxaliplatin coupled with IV chemotherapy has yielded OR levels of 64% in patients having survived one or more lines of chemotherapy IV and 62% in patients who have progressed on oxaliplatin IV. In addition, the HIA administration of oxaliplatin limits systemic and especially neurological toxicities, thanks to a greater hepatic clearance. In conclusion, the combination of systemic chemotherapy, targeted therapy and HIAC with oxaliplatin has showed promising efficacy results associated with good tolerance from the first line onwards. Indeed, we can expect from the Phase II recent data, a control rate close to 100%, with high response rates associated with early maturity and depth responses as well as prolonged survival. However, to date, in the absence of randomized trial testing this combination, this strategy does not have sufficient evidence to be integrated in our routine practices, and HIAC remains limited to a few expert centers in treatment catch-up.

18+ yearsAll GendersPHASE3
49 locations
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