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TrialFinderData is for informational purposes only and does not provide medical advice. Always talk to your doctor.

Updated June 2026 · ClinicalTrials.gov

Yunnan Cancer Hospital

3 clinical trials · 3 recruiting · OTHER

Yunnan Cancer Hospital has 3 clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, with 3 actively recruiting participants. The trials listed below cover 3 conditions across the phases listed in the sidebar. Always discuss any specific trial with your physician before contacting a study site.

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About Yunnan Cancer Hospital\'s Trial Portfolio

Yunnan Cancer Hospital is a non-industry sponsor (academic medical center, hospital, foundation, or research network). Non-industry sponsors often investigate novel approaches, rare conditions, and behavioral or surgical interventions that commercial sponsors may not prioritize.

3 of Yunnan Cancer Hospital's 3 registered trials are currently recruiting — roughly 100% of the portfolio. A high recruiting share usually points to an active research pipeline with multiple programs at the enrollment stage.

Yunnan Cancer Hospital's research footprint spans clinical-complete-response-rate-with-negative-mrd (1 trials), Non-muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (1), and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (1) as the top three conditions. The full condition list, sorted by trial count, is in the sidebar.

is the largest single phase in Yunnan Cancer Hospital's portfolio at 67% of registered trials. The full phase breakdown appears in the sidebar.

Trials by Yunnan Cancer Hospital

RECRUITINGNCT06477991

The Efficacy of Watch and Wait Strategy or Surgery After Neoadjuvant Immunotherapy for Locally Advanced Colorectal...

This study is a single arm, single center, phase II, prospective clinical study aimed at exploring the effectiveness and safety of watch and wait strategy guided by dynamic...

Sponsor: Yunnan Cancer HospitalEnrolling: 221 location
Clinical Complete Response Rate With Negative MRD
RECRUITINGNCT06972771

Trop2-targeting NIR-II Molecular Probe for Guided Identification of Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer

Bladder cancer ranks as the fourth most common malignancy among males the United States . Approximately 75% of patients present with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC)....

Sponsor: Yunnan Cancer HospitalEnrolling: 301 location
Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer
RECRUITINGNCT06735118

Feasibility Study of Deep Learning-based MDixon Quant for Quantitative Assessment of Chemotherapy-induced Fatty Liver

The purpose of this study is to quantitatively assess the changes in liver fat content in cancer patients before and after treatment. The main questions it aims to answer are:How...

Sponsor: Yunnan Cancer HospitalEnrolling: 1201 location
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

How to Approach a Trial Listing

Each trial card above links to a dedicated page with the official ClinicalTrials.gov data plus a plain-English translation of the eligibility criteria. We translate technical terminology (ECOG performance status, hepatic function values, exclusionary lab thresholds) into language that a patient or caregiver can understand, but the original clinical text and the live ClinicalTrials.gov record always govern any actual eligibility decision.

Before contacting a trial site, write down questions for your treating physician using the framework on our 25 Questions guide. Discuss whether the trial fits your treatment plan, what the time commitment looks like, and whether your insurance will cover the standard-of-care portions. Trials are not a substitute for a treatment plan — they are an addition that needs medical guidance to evaluate.

Authoritative Resources

Verify any trial registration directly on ClinicalTrials.gov. For background on the FDA approval pathway that Phase 3 trials feed into, see the FDA drug approval process. For cancer-specific trial guidance, the National Cancer Institute publishes patient-oriented overviews. For global trial registrations beyond the U.S., the WHO ICTRP aggregates registries from around the world.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many clinical trials does Yunnan Cancer Hospital have on ClinicalTrials.gov?

Yunnan Cancer Hospital has 3 clinical trials registered on the federal ClinicalTrials.gov registry, of which 3 are actively recruiting participants right now. These counts come directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API and are updated as the registry changes.

What conditions does Yunnan Cancer Hospital study?

Yunnan Cancer Hospital's registered trials cover 3 conditions on ClinicalTrials.gov, led by clinical-complete-response-rate-with-negative-mrd (1 trial), Non-muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (1 trial), Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (1 trial). The complete condition list appears in the sidebar of this page; each condition links to a page listing every recruiting trial in that area, regardless of sponsor.

How do I join a Yunnan Cancer Hospital clinical trial?

Joining a clinical trial is a medical decision that should always involve your treating physician. Each trial page on this site includes the eligibility criteria translated into plain English alongside the official clinical text, plus the contact information that the sponsor has registered with ClinicalTrials.gov. Bring the trial information to your doctor before reaching out — they can review the full inclusion and exclusion criteria against your medical history and help you decide whether to pursue screening.

What does the trial phase mean?

Phase 1 trials test safety and dosing in small groups (often 20–80 healthy volunteers or patients). Phase 2 trials evaluate efficacy and side effects in larger groups (100–300 patients with the target condition). Phase 3 trials confirm efficacy and monitor safety in the largest groups (300–3,000+ patients) and form the basis of an FDA approval submission. Phase 4 studies happen after a treatment is approved, monitoring long-term safety and effectiveness in real-world use. Some trials register without a phase — common for device, behavioral, or observational studies.

Where does this trial data come from?

All trial data is pulled directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API v2, the official federal trial registry maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. Under FDAAA 801, most U.S. drug and device trials are required to register, making ClinicalTrials.gov the most comprehensive source. Sponsors are responsible for keeping their listings current; trial status can shift between data refreshes.

How This Sponsor Page Is Built

Every count on this page is derived directly from ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 records. Trial counts include all trials currently registered to this sponsor; the recruiting count reflects trials with status "Recruiting" or equivalent. Plain-English eligibility translations on each linked trial page preserve the original clinical text alongside an accessible version. Read the full methodology for the data pipeline and limitations.

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov API v2, maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. Public domain. Cite as: "TrialFinderData. Data: ClinicalTrials.gov."

Medical disclaimer: This page is informational, not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

Last updated 2026-06-26 · 3 trials tracked for Yunnan Cancer Hospital.

The this entity record above pulls directly from the NIH ClinicalTrials.gov registry. What follows is the per-entity context — how this entity sits in the broader U.S. clinical trials and research registries distribution and which underlying factors drive the headline numbers.

Every number on this page links back to the NIH ClinicalTrials.gov registry; the methodology page describes the inputs, refresh cadence, and known limitations of the underlying data product.

For readers using this page as a decision input, the related-entity pages elsewhere on the site provide the comparison set. The most useful comparison for this entity is typically a peer within active and historical clinical trials with similar size, similar exposure, or similar geography — not the national-level summary alone.