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This study aims to explore the synergistic antitumor effects and safety of hyperthermia combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in patients with advanced gastrointestinal malignancies with liver metastases. Liver metastasis represents a common cause of treatment failure in gastrointestinal cancers, and the response rate to ICIs remains suboptimal in certain patients with liver metastases, potentially attributable to the immunosuppressive hepatic microenvironment. The combination of hyperthermia with ICIs, chemotherapy, or other therapeutic modalities may further enhance treatment efficacy. Hyperthermia could potentially reverse immunosuppression and improve ICI effectiveness through mechanisms including enhanced tumor blood perfusion, promoted antigen presentation, and increased immune cell infiltration. This multicenter, open-label, dual-cohort phase II trial will evaluate patients stratified by tumor type (colorectal cancer versus gastric cancer) to assess the objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), and safety profile of hyperthermia-ICI combination therapy. Concurrently, dynamic monitoring of peripheral immune markers (such as neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio and interleukins) and tumor microenvironment alterations will be conducted to identify potential predictive biomarkers, thereby providing preliminary evidence for subsequent phase III investigations. The ultimate objective is to develop more effective combination treatment strategies for patients with advanced gastrointestinal malignancies accompanied by liver metastases.
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Gastric cancer patients must have received at least one prior line of systemic therapy.
Colorectal cancer patients must have received at least two prior lines of systemic therapy.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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