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Solid Malignancy clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Solid Malignancy.

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NCT ID: NCT06201663 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chemotherapy-induced Thrombocytopenia

Romiplostim in Chemotherapy-Induced Thrombocytopenia

Start date: December 17, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Prospective interventional randomized controlled trial to assess safety and efficacy of romiplostim in chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia in children and adolescents with solid malignancy

NCT ID: NCT02751554 Recruiting - Multiple Myeloma Clinical Trials

PET Imaging of Patients Using 124I-PU-AD

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to help develop a special PET/CT scan to help the investigator to develop a new drug and see where this drug goes in the body and how long it stays in diseased and normal tissue. The drug is called PU-AD. In this study, the investigators will give a tiny dose of PU-AD, a dose which they expect to be much too small to affect the disease. This tiny dose will be labeled with (attached to) a very small amount of radiation (called Iodine-124 or 124I) so that the investigators can follow where it goes in the body by using a PET/CT scanner. Doing this will help the investigators figure out how to best give higher doses of PU-AD to other patients in the future, and will help the investigators see if this tiny dose of PU-AD with radiation (124I-PU-AD) might be used in the future to detect disease using a PET/CT scanner.

NCT ID: NCT01697930 Recruiting - Lymphoma Clinical Trials

A Phase I Study: PET Imaging of Cancer Patients Using [18F] 4-L-Fluoroglutamine (2S,4R)

Start date: September 2012
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase I study. This study is the first time that a new experimental drug called 18FFluoroglutamine, or F-Glutamine, is being used in people. F-Glutamine is a drug designed to be used with PET scanners that can 'see' where F-Glutamine goes in the body, after its injected. PET scanners are one of the kinds of scanners you normally find in a hospital radiology department. The researchers have found that tumors in animals absorb F-Glutamine. The researchers believe that scans with F-Glutamine might be able to find tumors in patients. This first in-human study is being done to see how long F-Glutamine lasts in the blood, when it is given to people in tiny amounts by an injection, and to see where F-Glutamine goes in the body. If the results of this trial are good, then the study doctors plan to use F-Glutamine in another trial to see if scans with F-Glutamine are better for finding tumors compared to the standard types of scans that doctors use.