View clinical trials related to Advanced Cancer.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether BMS-986218 both by itself and in combination with Nivolumab is safe and tolerable in the treatment of advanced solid tumors.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Cytokine induced killer cells combined chemotherapy is more effective in the treatment of advanced Pancreatic Cancer.
Open-label Phase 1 study of AutoSynVax™ vaccine with QS-21 Stimulon® adjuvant in subjects with advanced cancer
Mocetinostat (MGCD0103) is an orally administered HDAC inhibitor. Durvalumab (MEDI4736) is a human monoclonal antibody that is an inhibitor of the Programmed Cell Death Ligand (or PD-L1). Durvalumab is also known as a checkpoint inhibitor. This study is evaluating the combination regimen of mocetinostat and durvalumab in participants with Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumors and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
This is a phase 1 open-label trial to evaluate the safety, pharmacodynamics and clinical activity of RRx-001 administered in combination with irinotecan. RRx-001 is associated with resensitization to irinotecan in tumors that are previously refractory. This effect has been attributed to the ability of RRx-001 to restore the expression of aberrantly silenced genes, thus re-establishing pathway functions. However, resensitization may have more than one mechanism, among them Pgp pump inhibition and vascular modulation, leading to improved penetration of standard chemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Nivolumab, in combination with other therapies, is effective in patients with advanced Non-Small Cell lung cancer
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of JNJ-61610588 in participants with advanced cancer in order to determine a recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D) for further evaluation in specific tumor types.
This clinical trial is being done to learn more about how different types of cancer treatments affect cancer cells when they spread to the brain. Many cancer treatments are not able to make their way into the brain or into spinal fluid of the central nervous system. This is because they cannot cross what is called the "blood-brain barrier" or "BBB". The BBB is like a protective shield that only allows certain materials pass through to reach the brain but not others. This study is being initiated to help researchers learn more about what types of cancer treatments make it through the BBB to attack cancer cells within the brain, and what treatments do not make it through the BBB. Learning more about this may help future researchers develop more effective cancer drugs that better fight cancer cells that have spread to the brain.
This is a Phase 1b/2 dose-optimization study to evaluate safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary antitumor activity of avelumab (MSB0010718C) in combination with other cancer immunotherapies in patients with locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors. The primary purpose is to assess the safety and early signs of efficacy of various avelumab combinations with other cancer immunotherapies, optimizing dosing regimens as appropriate, in a limited series of indications.
Determine Phase 2 dose of study drug