View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:The overall purpose of this study is to explore the therapeutic effect of LeY-targeted chimeric antigen receptor T(CAR-T) cells in the treatment of myeloid malignancies.
Breast cancer surgery is known to cause severe acute postoperative pain, which can persist for a long time. The investigators administered nefopam preventively to patients undergoing total mastectomy or modified radical mastectomy with axillary lymph node dissection or sentinel lymph node biopsy, and evaluated its efficacy on acute and chronic postoperative pain.
Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PcP) increased in non HIV immunocompromised patients. Mortality remains high for those patients with comorbidities (50% for patients with the most severe Pneumocystis pneumonia). Physiopathology, characteristics and outcome of PcP in non-HIV patients remains different from those in HIV patients. Steroids in HIV patients with PcP has been associated with decreased mortality but in non-HIV patients, adjunctive steroids remains controversy. Some retrospective studies in that field did not find any beneficial effects of steroids ((1mg/kg/jour d'Equivalent Prednisone (EP)). However, all the studies were retrospective, non randomised studies including various underlying disease and severity of PcP was variable. Moreover, dosage and delay of steroids were variable leading difficult to interpret all the results. The investigators want to demonstrate the beneficial effect of steroid during PcP in non-HiV immunocompromised patients with a double blinded randomised clinical trials comparing adjunctive steroids to placebo.
This study is to allow continued use of ribociclib (LEE011) as single agent or in combination with other investigational treatments in patients benefitting from treatment in an eligible Novartis-sponsored ribociclib (LEE011) study that has reached its primary objective(s) or has been halted for other reasons.
The purpose of this study is to explore the effect of G-CSF combination with GM-CSF on prevention and treatment of infection in children with malignant tumor.
This is a single-arm, open-label, one center, dose escalation clinical study, to determine the safety and efficacy of infusion of autologous T cells engineered to express chimeric antigen receptor targeting mesothelin in adult patients with mesothelin positive, recurrent or metastatic malignant tumors.
A Chimeric Switch Receptor, which was constructed by fusing the PD1 extracellular ligand binding domain to the CD28 intracellular costimulatory domain, was designed to target PD-L 1 positive tumors . In this single-arm, open-label, one center, dose escalation clinical study, the main purpose is to determine the safety and efficacy of infusion of autologous Chimeric Switch Receptor modified T cells (CSR T) in adult patients with PD-L1 positive, recurrent or metastatic malignant tumors.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the usefulness of high-tech endoscopy in clinical practice. The important elements of this evaluation are: - Evaluation of the character of neoplastic lesions in the colon based on different imaging techniques - Verification of the endoscopic image with histopathologic descriptions - Establishing the type of the lesion on the basis of Kudo and NICE classifications - Comparison of the result of histopathological examination with the macroscopic type of the lesion - Determination of the most advanced lesions (MAL) - Comparison of the cecal intubation time - Evaluation of the type of anesthesia used during colonoscopy - Subjective assessment of the severity of pain according to VAS (visual analogue scale) - Comparison of the accuracy of the location of lesions on the basis of endoscopic navigation - Comparison of the total examination time - Comparison of adenoma detection rate
This is a prospective, non-randomized clinical trial that aims to describe the efficacy and toxicity of commercially available, targeted anticancer drugs* prescribed for treatment of patients with advanced cancer with a potentially actionable variant as revealed by a genomic or protein expression test. The study also aims to simplify patient access to approved targeted therapies that are contributed to the program by collaborating pharmaceutical companies and to perform next generation sequencing on tumor biopsies for biomarker analyses. Eligible patients have an advanced solid tumor, multiple myeloma or B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma for which standard treatment options are no longer available and acceptable performance status and organ function. A genomic or protein expression test must have been performed on the tumor and the results must identify at least one potentially actionable molecular variant as defined in the protocol. Results from the molecular profiling test will be used to determine an appropriate drug(s) from among those available in the protocol. The choice of drug will be supported by a list of potential profiles, a molecular tumor board, a knowledge library and by study coordinators for review and approval of the match. The protocol-specified treatment will be administered to the patient once any drug-specific eligibility criteria are confirmed and a fresh pre-treatment biopsy is performed for future genetic studies. All patients who receive treatment with a drug available in the protocol will be followed for standard efficacy outcomes including tumor response, progression-free and overall survival as well as duration of treatment. In addition, treatment related toxicity will be evaluated.
This research study is studying palbociclib as a possible treatment for recurrent brain metastases. - Pfizer, a pharmaceutical company, is supporting this research study by providing the study drug as well as funding for research activities