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The purpose of this study is to assess whether in a population of patients with advanced colorectal cancer for which no known effective therapy is available, measuring the spontaneous evolution of tumoral metabolic progression index by serial FGD PET-CT and Diffusion MRI can show that tumor growth rate is related to the patient's outcome, and that serial FDG PET-CT and Diffusion MRI are able to measure it.
Full description
Natural history of tumors is a poorly studied subject, the clinical evidence of some tumors aggressiveness as opposed to some other's indolent behavior has never been formally assessed in daily practice or in clinical studies and remains largely unpredictable. The patient's populations are in fact a mix between different tumoral phenotypes that while carrying the same apparent disease evolve with different outcomes.
We hypothesize that,in a population of patients with advanced colorectal cancer for which no known effective therapy is available, measuring the spontaneous evolution of tumoral metabolic progression index by serial FGD PET-CT and Diffusion MRI can show that tumor growth rate is related to the patient's outcome, and that serial FDG PET-CT and Diffusion MRI are able to measure it.
If the hypothesis is verified, this finding could:
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Total bilirubin within 2 × normal institutional upper limits AST/ALT/Alk Phosphatase levels < 5 × normal institutional upper limits Creatinine within 2 × normal institutional upper limits or creatinine clearance > 35mL/min
Exclusion criteria
Patients who exhibit any of the following conditions at screening will not be eligible for admission into the study:
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53 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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