View clinical trials related to Cancer.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of modafinil with regard to reducing cancer-related fatigue in cancer patients following chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Secondarily, the effect of modafinil on cognitive dysfunction in the same population will be assessed. The researchers hypothesize that administering modafinil (PROVIGIL®) to patients experiencing fatigue following completion of cancer treatment will lead to reduction in patient fatigue and prevention of or improvement in patient cognitive dysfunction.
The purpose of this study is to identify specific chemotherapy-related changes in sleep stages/architecture that may relate to an increase in fatigue in individuals with cancer. The researchers hypothesize that the fatigue experienced by cancer patients receiving chemotherapy is in part due to changes in restorative sleeping during the non-rapid eye movement cycles of sleep (i.e., delta activity).
This is a Phase II study of the drug combination of Oxaliplatin, Avastin and capecitabine. This is an open-label study.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate a new anti-cancer drug called S CKD602, developed by ALZA Corporation. The drug is investigational and not approved by the Food and Drug administration (FDA). The side effects (the way the drug acts in your body) and the effect it has on your disease will be studied.
This is a phase II study that will investigate weekly dosing of docetaxel in combination with capecitabine in advanced gastric and gastro-esophageal adenocarcinomas.
This is a phase II, open-label trial of Gefitinib and docetaxel in patients having one prior regimen of chemotherapy for with metastatic pancreatic carcinoma.
In this study proposal, the investigators will extend their previous studies and examine the kinetic cytotoxic activity with concordant expression of inhibitory natural killer (NK) receptors (iNKR) on activated T cells. The inhibitory role of cytokines will be defined by utilizing the investigators' previously established models of mixed lymphocytes and tumor cells coculture to analyze the expression and activity of cytokines involved in the regulation of iNKRs on cancer-encountered T cells.
It is the aim of this multicentric clinical study to assess the efficacy and tolerability of zoledronic acid in combination with radiotherapy in patients with advanced osteolytic bone lesions in terms of the reduction of pain and analgesic consumption.
This is a study to see whether the drug Salagen or salivary gland transfer is better for the prevention of dryness of the mouth in patients with head and neck cancer receiving radiation treatment.
Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among males in the U.S. More than 220,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in the USA this year and more that 31,000 will die of this disease. Androgen deprivation, the elimination of testosterone and its active metabolites, remains the single most effective intervention available for the treatment of advanced prostate carcinoma. Androgen deprivation induces an immune response to normal prostate and prostate cancer, which is usually short-lived. Estradiol induces activation of many arms of the immune system and may be a more effective and long lasting means of inducing immunity to prostate tissue. This study will treat clinically localized prostate cancer patients with either estrogens, or standard androgen deprivation without estrogens, prior to prostatectomy in order more completely to describe immune regulation by estradiol in men. Control tissue from patients who have not been treated with androgen deprivation will be procured from the Northwest Special Projects in Oncology Research Excellence (SPORE) tissue core and used as comparisons against the cancers treated before prostatectomy. Tumors removed at prostatectomy, tissue samples and blood samples will be assessed for immune system changes.