View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:The objective of this hybrid effectiveness-implementation study is to examine the effects of an EHR-based cardiovascular health assessment tool (AH-HA) among breast, prostate, colorectal, endometrial, and Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma cancer survivors (N=600) receiving survivorship care in community oncology practices, using a group-randomized trial design (6 intervention practices and 6 usual care practices). Our central hypothesis is that the AH-HA tool will increase (1) cardiovascular health (CVH) discussions among survivors and oncology providers, (2) referrals and visits to primary care and cardiology (care coordination), and (3) cardiovascular (CV) risk reduction and health promotion activities compared to usual care.
This is a phase I, open-label, multicenter study in adult patients with advanced solid tumors that have progressed despite standard therapy or for which no standard therapy exists. DN1508052-01 will be administered subcutaneously on Day 1, Day 8 and Day 15 in 28-day cycles. Other dose regimens may be explored based on the analysis of emerging PK, pharmacodynamics (PD) and safety data. This study is designed to determine the MTD, RP2D and investigate the safety, tolerability, PK, biomarkers, HPV status and ISR in DN1508052-01-treated patients.
According to the high expression of tumor cell-associated antigen Nectin4 in patients with solid tumors such as non-small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, bladder cancer, and pancreatic cancer, and in order to target FAP-positive CAFs in the tumor-associated stroma, the Intravenous minimally invasive surgery combined with intratumoral injection of Nectin4/FAP-targeted fourth-generation CAR-T cells (expressing IL7 and CCL19, or IL12) are used to treat Nectin4-positive advanced malignant solid tumors, maximally eliminating residual cancer cells and preventing recurrence.
This is an open-label, two-part study to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and clinical efficacy of acalabrutinib in Chinese adult subjects with R/R MCL, CLL and other B-cell malignancies. The study is divided into 2 parts: Phase 1 portion and Phase 2 portion.
Immunotherapy has become the major breakthrough and the most promising treatment, with the host of development of tumor biology, molecular biology and immunology. ROBO1 is a potential target and spectacular paradigm in the diagnosis and treatment of solid tumors. This study is for evaluation of the safety and efficacy of ROBO1 CAR-NK/T cell immunotherapy for malignant tumors.
This study is a Phase 1, single center, open-label study, assessing single agent dose escalation of OKI-179.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT of the brain, is able to distinguish radiation necrosis from tumor progression in cases where MRI is inconclusive. 18F-fluciclovine is an FDA approved radioactive diagnostic agent and is injected into the participant and then taken up by cancer cells, which can then be visualized with a PET/CT scan. 18F-fluciclovine is FDA approved for the detection of recurrent prostate cancer, but is still investigational for the purposes of this study.
The aim of the study is to identify a pattern of chemoresistive sensors able to recognise the presence of a tumoral pathology from a health state through the analysis of Volatile Organic Compounds inside the specimen. The chemoresistive nanostructured sensors are into an innovative patented device SCENT B1 which can analyse different specimens: blood samples, tissue biopsies, cell cultures. In this study SCENT B1 wil be used to compare the measures of: - tumoral and health tissues taken from different neoplasms after their surgical resection - blood samples from healthy and tumor affected people - pre and post- operative blood samples of tumor affected people
This phase II/III trial studies an open labeled placebo to see how well it works compared with waitlist control in reducing cancer related fatigue in patients with cancer that has spread to other places in the body. A placebo is not a drug and is not designed to treat any disease or illness. Recent studies have found that cancer related fatigue symptoms in cancer survivors are improved with open labeled placebo (that is, patients know they are taking a placebo). It is not yet known how well an open labeled placebo works when compared with waitlist control in reducing cancer related fatigue.
The efficacy and safety of the PARP inhibitor in combination with the VEGFR inhibitor will be investigated in advanced refractory solid tumors patients with TP53 mutation .