View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:Microparticles are cellular fragments which are released actively or passively under conditions of inflammation and stress. The impact of surgical operations on quantity and quality of microparticles remains unknown. In this observatory study we investigate quantitative and qualitative aspects of microparticles during cardiac and abdominal operations.
This study is an open-label, multicenter, Phase 1, dose escalation study of MLN4924 in adult patients with nonhematologic malignancies. This study will be the first to administer MLN4924 in humans. The patient population will consist of adults with any form of nonhematologic malignancy for which standard, curative, life prolonging, or palliative treatment does not exist or is no longer effective.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety of the drug (JNJ-24681585 a drug in development for cancer) in patients with advanced or refractory solid malignancies or lymphoma on the maximum dose that can be tolerated by these patients. The absorption, breakdown and elimination of the drug will be studied and in some patients, the effect of the food on these processes will also be examined.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety of R306465 (a drug in development for cancer) in patients with advanced cancer on the maximum dose that can be tolerated. Also, the absorption, breakdown and elimination of the drug will be studied.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety of JNJ-26854165 (a new drug in development for cancer) in patients with advanced or refractory solid tumors on the maximum dose tolerated by these patients.
The purpose of this study is to assess JNJ-26483327 (a drug in development for cancer) for the safety of the drug in patients with advanced solid tumors that have not responded or are no longer responding to available therapies. The absorption, breakdown and elimination of the drug will also be studied.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of cell depletion in a donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) product with the use of the CliniMACS machine. Previously, patients with hematologic malignancies who have relapsed after transplant have been given infusions of donor white blood cells calsed donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) as a way to boost their immune function and fight cancer. Information from other research studies suggests that lowering the number of a certain type of white blood cell called CD25+ Tregs in the DLI may allow for a greater effect. In this research study, we are looking for the appropriate dose of DLI depleted of the CD25+ Treg white blood cells that can be given safely.
The goal of this clinical research study is to learn if ruxolitinib can help to control advanced hematological malignancies. The safety of this drug will also be studied.
Background: - Pazopanib is an experimental drug that was designed to enter cancer cells and block the activity of proteins that are important for cancer cell growth and survival. - This is the first study in which pazopanib is given to patients with different degrees of liver function. The safe dose for patients with normal liver function is already known. Objectives: - To determine the safety and side effects of pazopanib given at different dose levels to patients with cancer who have different degrees of liver function. - To find out how much pazopanib is in the blood at specific times. - To determine if pazopanib is effective in treating advanced cancer in patients with different degrees of liver function. Eligibility: - Patients 18 years of age and older with an advanced solid tumor or lymphoma that cannot be treated successfully with standard therapies and who have normal or abnormal liver function. Design: - Treatment: - Patients are divided into 4 groups, based on their liver function. The first three patients in each group receive a low dose of pazopanib. The next three in each group receive a higher dose of pazopanib if no serious side effects were reported in the previous three. The dose is increased in succeeding groups of three patients until the maximum study dose is reached. - Patients take pazopanib once a day by mouth in 21-day treatment cycles. Treatment continues until the cancer worsens, the patient develops severe side effects, the patient no longer wants to continue the study, or the doctor removes the patient from the study for other reasons. - Monitoring: - Blood pressure: Patients monitor and record their blood pressure twice a day after starting treatment. - Blood tests: Patients have weekly routine blood tests. In addition, at week 3 of the first cycle and again after the highest safe dose has been determined, several blood samples are collected at frequent intervals to determine how the body handles the drug. - Imaging studies: X-rays or scans or both are done to measure the extent of disease every 3 cycles. - Physical examinations are done at periodic intervals.
Subjects will be diagnosed with a hematological malignancy (cancer of the blood), which is unlikely to be cured with conventional non-transplant therapy. The best results of bone marrow transplant are obtained with the donor is a relative that has identical tissue type (HLA-type). These subjects will not have such a donor available but they will have a appropriately matching unrelated umbilical cord blood unit (UCB). However, the cord blood unit does not contain a high enough number of cells and may take longer to engraft (or grow). The purpose of this study is to determine whether the addition of stem cells from a family member to supplement a standard unrelated cord blood transplant is safe and will increase the success of the cord blood transplantation procedure. Subjects enrolled in this study will receive an unrelated cord blood transplant plus a haplo-identical (half-matched), T-cell depleted stem transplant from a related donor. The goal of this study is to determine whether the addition of the related stem cells accelerates bone marrow recovery and improves long-term disease free survival.