View clinical trials related to Solid Tumor.
Filter by:The patients are being asked to take part in this clinical trial because they received cancer treatment as a child at St. Jude. The study comprehensively examines sleep among three distinct diagnostic groups of survivors in the SJLIFE cohort: ALL, CNS tumors, and non-CNS solid tumors. Primary Objective The primary aim of this protocol is to estimate the prevalence of various sleep disorders among long-term survivors of childhood ALL, CNS tumors, and non- CNS solid tumors. Exploratory Objective The exploratory objective of the study is to explore associations between the prevalence of sleep disorders and clinical outcomes collected in SJLIFE.
In this study, the dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), maximum tolerated dose (MTD), recommended phase II dose (RP2D), the preliminary efficacy, pharmacokinetic characteristics, and immunogenicity of BL-B01D1 will be investigated in patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer and other solid tumors.
Oncology and hemotology patients under anticancer treatments are exposed to increased risks of central venous catheter-related complications due to the underlying cancer and its treament. This prospective observational monocentric french study aims at describing the incidence of such complications, their morbimortality, and analyzing some risk factors in order to contribute to propose some strategies to reduce these complications' rate and consequences
The objective of the study is to assess the effect of food on the pharmacokinetics, and safety of Fuzuloparib Capsules in healthy subject.
The purpose of this clinical trial is to assess the feasibility, safety and efficacy of anti-GD2/PSMA bi-specific CAR-T cell therapy in patients with GD2 and PSMA positive tumor. Another goal of the study is to learn more about the function of the anti-GD2/PSMA bi-specific CAR-T cells and their persistency in patients.
The objective of the study is to construct a noninvasive approach 68Ga-ACN376 PET/CT to detect the CLDN18.2 expression of tumor lesions in patients with Solid tumors and to identify patients benefiting from CLDN18.2 targeting treatment.
This study is a single-center, single-arm phase I clinical trial. A total of 30 subjects (20 evaluable cases are expected) from 1 cohort will be enrolled in this study. An "autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte therapy" dosing regimen consisting of lymphodepleting chemotherapy (FC regimen: cyclophosphamide + fludarabine), infusion of autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte injection, and interleukin-2 injection will be used.The study process is divided into: screening period, sampling and production period, clearing and chemotherapy period, treatment and observation period, and follow-up period
The main purpose of this study is to determine the safety and tolerability of TRK-950 alone and in combination with Nivolumab in patients with advanced solid tumors
This study seeks to enroll participants who have a diagnosis of a solid tumor cancer and are willing to undergo germline genetic testing for cancer risk. At baseline, patients will be asked to provide 2 types of blood samples: 1 tube for clinical genetic testing and 2 tubes for future research use. A tumor sample from a previous resection or biopsy will also be obtained and sent to the sponsor. The clinician will be asked to provide relevant medical history and demographic information to the sponsor in the form of electronic case report forms.
During treatment, cancer patients may experience side effects related to their disease but also to the different treatments they receive. Currently, adverse effects and toxicities are well codified in the oncology community, notably via the NCI CTCAE criteria. Unlike objective data such as a blood sample or a CTscan, a major bias in patient assessment is the subjective assessment of the physician or its team at a given time, which may not reflect the overall situation (for better or worse). Several studies had already highlighted the discrepancies between medical and patient data collection. Self-assessment of symptoms is one way to overcome this bias. Moreover, there are now a large number of solutions that allow to perform these self-assessments at home. Thanks to these tools, there are now two situations, the scheduled evaluation (before a chemotherapy treatment, or after a surgical procedure for instance) and the unscheduled situations, where it is the patient himself who can trigger an evaluation form. These new evaluation methods also allow to take a quality of life approach. Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) is now a valid evidence-based assay to detect patient's symptoms and therefore provide helpful clinical information to healthcare providers. The goal of this study is to go one step further than the previous PROs studies and evaluate the ability to train a machine learning algorithm to detect at-risk situations and lay the foundation for a viable solution for future prospective and randomized trials.