View clinical trials related to Pancreatic Cancer.
Filter by:This study is designed to investigate the means by which cancer resists treatment can be overcome by a combination of an established anticancer drug, trametinib, with hydroxychloroquine.
Early detection and early treatment is the most important issue to improve the long-term survival of pancreatic cancer patients. CA199 is the most commonly used biomarker for early detection and to predict survival, however, the overall positive rate for CA199 is only 75%, and what is worse, for the early stage of pancreatic cancer patients, the positive rate is even lower, and for the lewis negative patients, CA199 is not produced at all. Therefore, novel biomarkers for the early detection of pancreatic cancer are still urgently needed. Previously, we found there is a vicious cycle between pancreatic cancer cells, that is pancreatic cancer-produced TGFbeta1 could promote the production of soluble CD58 (sCD58) in macrophages, and then sCD58 could induce the production of TGFbeta1 in pancreatic cancer cells. Therefore, the serum level of TGFbeta1 and sCD58 has diagnostic and survival values for pancreatic cancer.
This is a prospective pilot protocol investigating whether ctDNA detection be improved by sampling the cancer draining vein versus the standard practice of sampling from a peripheral vein in patients who are undergoing biopsies for hepatobiliary and pancreatic cancers.
To explore the possibility to overcome CYP3A-mediated resistance to anticancer drugs in pancreatic cancer, we will investigate the pharmacokinetics, safety, tolerability, and efficacy of nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel (nab-paclitaxel) in combination with gemcitabine and the CYP3A inhibitor cobicistat in a phase I proof-of-concept trial to determine the safety profile, the recommended dose of nab-paclitaxel in combination with gemcitabine and cobicistat, and to determine whether there is an early efficacy signal warranting a larger scale trial. The present trial is an open-label trial consisting of a dose-escalation part and an expansion part. The dose escalation part is designed to determine the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of nab-paclitaxel in combination with gemcitabine and cobicistat and will guide the dosing in the expansion part of the trial. The trial enrolls patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma and adequate performance score (ECOG PS 0-2) who would usually receive gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel according to standard of care. Primary endpoint for the phase I trial is the safety of the combination. Overall survival (OS), disease control rate (DCR), overall response rate (ORR), duration of response (DoR) and progression free survival (PFS) are secondary efficacy endpoints. Further secondary endpoints are tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and pharmacogenomics.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of Ampligen in patients with locally advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma
The PLATON Network study is designed to elevate personalized therapy based on genomic tumor profiles in gastrointestinal cancer patients. Hereby, PLATON's study-design focuses on the patient's tumor molecular profiling. Within the network a web application will be developed to link clinical investigators and information on study sites, cancer patients and genetic alteration data, as well as available clinical trials at PLATON's study sites.
Pilot study evaluating the feasibility of a 2-4 week health care provider guided exercise intervention prior to surgery for pancreatic cancer.
This is an open label, multi-center, Phase 1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of autologous claudin18.2 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy in advanced solid tumors with positive CLDN18.2 expression
A multi-institutional, single arm pilot study of antibiotics and pembrolizumab, following chemotherapy for the treatment of surgically resectable pancreatic cancer.
The primary objective of this prospective observational study is to characterize the gut and oral microbiome as well as the whole blood transcriptome in gastrointestinal cancer patients and correlate these findings with cancer type, treatment efficacy and toxicity. Participants will be recruited from existing clinical sites only, no additional clinical sites are needed.