View clinical trials related to Melanoma.
Filter by:MERLIN_001 is a prospective registry study of a primary melanoma gene-signature to predict sentinel node (SN) status and to determine its prognostic value for more accurate staging of SN-negative melanoma patients.
The subsequent treatment choices for the patients with advanced melanoma, who have failed the immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy of single agent. Evidences showed that PD-1 and PD-L1 signalling pathways are not redundant. Blocking both of them could produce synergistic effect. HX008 and LP002 are humanized monoclonal antibodies targeting PD-1 on T cells and PD-L1 on tumor cells respectively. In this study, participants with locally advanced or metastatic melanoma who have failed previous anti-PD-1 or PD-L1 will be administrated with HX008 plus LP002. The safety and preliminary efficacy will be evaluated.
This study learn how easily patients can use an educational tool that will be created for patients with melanoma and pre-existing autoimmune diseases who receive or will receive immune checkpoint inhibitor drugs. Patients will be asked their opinions about the design, accessibility, and content of the tool. Researchers will use the information collected to improve the educational materials that will help patients make future decisions about their treatment.
This study is a diagnostic study. Patients and healthy volunteers were recruited from clinically suspected or confirmed melanoma patients to undergo 18F-PEG3-FPN PET/MR or PET/CT imaging to observe the response of the subjects after drug injection, and evaluate the efficacy of 18F-PEG3-FPN PET imaging in the diagnosis and staging of melanoma compared with 18F-FDG PET imaging. PET/CT imaging was performed in patients with contraindications to MR. The subjects underwent 18F-PEG3-FPN and 18F-FDG PET/MR or PET/CT imaging at an interval of two days, respectively. The general information, clinical data, blood routine, liver and kidney function indexes, 18F-PEG3-FPN and 18F-FDG PET/MR or PET/CT imaging results and other imaging data of the patients and volunteers were collected, and the histopathology of biopsy or surgical specimen was taken as the final diagnostic criteria. This study plans to set the sample size as 50 cases.
The purpose of this study is to assess rate of disease relapse and hazard rate of disease relapse after neoadjuvant therapy based on the statuses of pathologic complete response or non-pathologic complete response, and postoperative adjuvant therapy.
Single-centre, first-in-man phase I/II trial to demonstrate safety and efficacy of MAGE-C2/HLA-A2 TCR T cells (MC2 TCR T cells) in advanced melanoma (MEL) and head-and-neck carcinoma (HNSCC).
This phase II trial studies the effect of transarterial chemoembolization in treating patients with uveal melanoma that has spread to the liver (liver metastases). Transarterial chemoembolization involves the injection of a blocking agent (gelatin sponge, ethiodized oil) and a chemotherapy agent (carmustine) directly into the artery in the liver to treat liver cancers. Chemotherapy drugs, such as carmustine, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. transarterial chemoembolization with carmustine in combination with ethiodized oil and gelatin sponge may help cause the tumors in the liver to shrink or disappear.
The study main objective is to assess whether the early introduction of supportive care demonstrates a benefit on patients' psychological care needs at 6 months (M6), versus oncological standard of care in patients with metastatic UM. Supportive care in patients with metastatic Uveal Melanoma (UM)
This is a Phase I/IIa, multicenter, open-label, consecutive cohorts, dose-escalation study of BT-001 with repeated IT administrations alone and in combination with IV infusions of pembrolizumab.
This is an open-label, phase IB, non-randomised study consisting of a dose escalation phase and expansion phase, evaluating the safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy of the combination of encorafenib, binimetinib and palbociclib in patients with BRAF-mutant metastatic melanoma. Dose escalation phase: Previously treated or treatment-naïve patients will be evaluated after the first cycle for dose-limiting toxicities to ascertain the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of encorafenib, binimetinib and palbociclib. Expansion phase: Two cohorts of patients will be further evaluated for the efficacy and safety of the RP2D of palbociclib with encorafenib and binimetinib. Cohort 1 will include patients naïve to both BRAF and MEK inhibitors. Cohort 2 will include patients with either primary or acquired resistance to both BRAF and MEK inhibitors.