Clinical Research Directory
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3 clinical studies listed.
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Tundra lists 3 Bile Duct Carcinoma clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT06715839
Target-specific immunoPET Imaging of Digestive System Carcinoma
The aim of this study is to establish and optimize the target-specific PET/CT imaging method, and its physiological and pathological distribution characteristics, on the basis of which the diagnostic efficacy of the above imaging agents in digestive system malignant tumors will be evaluated.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years
Updated: 2025-12-31
1 state
NCT07120295
Study of Large Channel Digital Pancreaticobiliary Scope (DPS) With Compatible Accessories
This study plans to enroll up to 75 research subject who have a biliary disorder such as bile duct stones or intermediate biliary strictures. The purpose of this research is to assess whether the Dragonfly™ Pancreaticobiliary Scope functioned as intended in combination with the commercially available accessories during your scheduled endoscopy procedure. This includes achieving stone fragmentation of difficult biliary stone(s) while obtaining adequate tissue specimens for analysis. There will also be a Product performance evaluation as rated by the endoscopist operating the DPS System and evaluation of ergonomics and usability.
Gender: All
Ages: 21 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-09-05
1 state
NCT07025174
Sequential Anti-Angiogenic Therapy After Immunotherapy in Advanced Biliary Tract Cancer
Brief Summary: This study is for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer (cancer of the bile ducts or gallbladder). The purpose is to find out if using anti-blood vessel formation drugs after immunotherapy treatment can help patients live longer without their cancer getting worse. What the study compares: Control group: Patients receive standard chemotherapy as first-line treatment, then chemotherapy plus anlotinib (an anti-blood vessel drug) if their cancer progresses Treatment group: Patients receive chemotherapy plus immunotherapy as first-line treatment, then the same second-line treatment as the control group if their cancer progresses Who can join: Patients aged 18-75 with advanced biliary tract cancer that has been confirmed by tissue testing, who have not received immunotherapy or anti-blood vessel drugs before, and who are in good enough health for treatment. What we want to learn: The main goal is to see if patients who received immunotherapy first have better outcomes when they later receive anti-blood vessel treatment. We will measure how long patients live without their cancer getting worse during second-line treatment. Study design: This is a randomized study, meaning patients are assigned by chance to one of the two treatment groups. About 60 patients will participate across multiple hospitals in China. We will also collect blood and tissue samples to better understand how these treatments work. The study will help doctors determine if this treatment sequence could become a new standard approach for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years
Updated: 2025-06-17
1 state