View clinical trials related to Ovarian Cancer.
Filter by:The primary purpose of this study is to determine the response rate of patients with recurrent platinum resistant ovarian cancer when treated with oral minoxidil. Secondary objectives include estimating the time to disease progression while on minoxidil and to describe the toxicities of minoxidil when used for patients with recurrent platinum resistant ovarian cancer. An exploratory objective is to evaluate if efficacy of minoxidil is improved in patients that have the Kir6/SUR complex versus those that do not.
Ovarian cancer is associated with the highest mortality of all gynecologic cancers. In patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer after platinum-containing chemotherapy plus bevacizumab therapy, maintenance therapy with olaparib plus bevacizumab significantly prolongs progression-free survival (PFS) in the intended population and is recommended by guidelines. However, study shows those homologous recombinant repair defect (HRD) but Breast Cancer Susceptibility Gene(BRCA) wild type have limited benefit from maintenance therapy with olaparib plus bevacizumab when surgery is with residual(no-R0). Can hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy(HIPEC) improve the benefits of first-line maintenance therapy in patients with non-R0 resection, HRD? The cohort study will enroll 310 patients with HRD and no-R0 resection who conduct HIPEC during primary treatment and then have olaparib plus bevacizumab as maintenance. Follow-up period is 30 months. The primary endpoint is PFS.
This is a Phase 1/2, first-in-human, open-label, dose escalation and dose-expansion study of E-602, administered alone and in combination with cemiplimab.
This project intends to evaluate the sensitivity of different Homologous Recombination Deficiency (HRD) score to Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor (PARPi) by retrospectively analyzing the tissue samples of patients with ovarian cancer using PARPi, and to determine the cut off value of the HRD score algorithm suitable for the Chinese population, so as to provide evidence for the role of PARPi in ovarian cancer. The screening of the beneficiaries of maintenance therapy provides precise guidance and can be used as a reference for other cancer types.
MITO 35b is designed as randomized, open label, phase III trial that aims to assess the efficacy of olaparib maintenance beyond progression compered to standard platinum-based chemotherapy after secondary cytoreductive surgery. The target population of this study are ovarian cancer patients who experience a disease recurrence or progression to a first line maintenance therapy with PARPi; at progression patients must have received a secondary cytoreduction according to clinical practice.
This is a Phase 1/2, open-label, first-in-human (FIH) study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and anticancer activity of BLU-222, a selective inhibitor of CDK2.
NUV-868-01 is a first-in human, open- label, Phase 1/2 dose escalation and expansion study in patients with advanced solid tumors. The Phase 1 and 1b portions include patients with advanced solid tumors and are designed to determine the safety and the dose(s) of NUV-868 to be used as monotherapy and in combination with olaparib or enzalutamide for the Phase 2 portion. In Phase 2, NUV-868 in combination with olaparib or enzalutamide will be given to determine the safety and efficacy of these study treatments. One cohort of patients (with enzalutamide-naïve metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer) will be randomized to receive either NUV-868 monotherapy, enzalutamide monotherapy, or the combination of NUV-868 + enzalutamide. Patients will self-administer NUV-868 orally daily in 28-day cycles as monotherapy in Phases 1 and 2. In Phases 1b and 2, patients will self-administer NUV-868 orally daily in 28-day cycles in combination with olaparib or enzalutamide daily at standard prescribed doses (Phase 1b) or at the recommended Phase 2 combination dose (RP2cD) that is determined in Phase 1b. Patients will be treated until disease progression, toxicity, withdrawal of consent, or termination of the study.
As one of the most common malignant tumors in women, the incidence of ovarian cancer is expected to increase year by year. Due to its lack of typical symptoms and effective screening methods, and the characteristics of implantation and distant metastasis, more than 70% of ovarian cancers were in the metastatic stage at the time of diagnosis. In this study, the investigators will collect large samples of tissue from patients with ovarian cancer, conduct multi-omics studies, and mapped the characteristic maps of the genome and transcriptome of patients with metastatic ovarian cancer, and explore the molecular mechanisms that can be used as new targets for the treatment of ovarian cancer. Besides, the investigators will design and establish a database of metastatic ovarian cancer, integrate multiple omics, imaging, pathology, and clinical information to study their potential relevance, and analyze the relationship between various omics, imaging, pathology, and prognosis, establish ovaries Cancer prediction model.
A Phase 1, open label, dose escalation and expanded cohort study of P-MUC1C-ALLO1 in adult subjects with advanced or metastatic epithelial derived solid tumors, including but not limited to the tumor types listed below.
This trial is a multicenter, prospective, phase II single arm, open-label trial in which patients with newly diagnosed advanced epithelial ovarian, primitive peritoneal, and fallopian tube cancer BRCA wild type, in partial or complete response to first line platinum-based chemotherapy, receive Olaparib maintenance therapy (300 mg, tablets formulation twice daily).