View clinical trials related to Solid Tumor.
Filter by:This is a first-time-in-human, phase I, open-label, dose-escalation study of HMPL-453 in patients with advanced or metastatic solid malignancies who have failed or are intolerable to standard therapies or for whom no standard therapies exist. There are preliminary two stages in this study: a dose-escalation stage (stage 1) and a dose-expansion stage (stage 2). We will decide whether to conduct stage 2 or not one month after the last patient included in stage 1.
Synthetic phosphoethanolamine is a primary amine which has a critical role in the biosynthesis of cell membranes. Pre-clinical models have shown potential anticancer activity.
This research study is examining merestinib (a targeted therapy) as a possible treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) that was found to have a specific change in the MET gene (a MET exon 14 mutation); or as a treatment for solid tumors that have an alteration in the NTRK gene (an NTRK1, 2, or 3 rearrangement).
Subjects treated with an ACTR product may participate in this long-term follow-up study after the completion of the final scheduled visit in the parent clinical study or other investigational setting, such as compassionate use, named patient Investigational New Drug application, expanded access program, or equivalent setting. No investigational product or treatment will be administered in this study. These subjects will be followed for safety monitoring on a schedule of decreasing frequency through 15 years post-ACTR treatment, in accordance with US FDA Regulatory guidance pertaining to long-term safety follow-up for study subjects receiving recombinant DNA-containing investigational products.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of chemokine (C-X-C Motif) receptor 4 (CXCR4) peptide antagonist LY2510924 and durvalumab for phase 1a and 1b in participants with advanced refractory solid tumors.
Multicenter, open-label, phase 1a/1b trial of PF-07901800 (TTI-621) in subjects with relapsed or refractory hematologic malignancies and selected solid tumors.
There is currently no standard treatment for patients with neuro-epithelial (brain) or other solid tumors in another part of the body who do not have adequate suitable autologous hematopoietic progenitor cells available and/or whose disease has relapsed after standard treatment. Allogeneic Hematopoietic Progenitor Cell Transplant may be a consideration for treatment of patients with recurrent chemo-responsive malignant (high grade) neuro-epithelial and other solid tumors or those who do not have suitable autologous hematopoietic progenitor cell availability. The procedure in which your own blood stem cells are transplanted to you is called an autologous (from your own) progenitor cell transplant and when cells from a matched donor are transfused is called an allogeneic progenitor cell transplant. The study is being conducted to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of a combination of drugs followed by an allogeneic hematopoietic progenitor cell transplant (HPCT). This treatment regimen is experimental in that although the individual drugs are commonly used to treat your disease, the specific combination used in this protocol followed by the transplant is experimental.
Toxicities related to pediatric cancer treatment can lead to significant illness, organ damage, treatment delays, increased health care cost, and decrease in quality of life. Such toxicities are largely due to tissue damage sustained by chemotherapy, and strategies designed to limit such cellular damage to normal tissues may reduce therapy-related morbidity and mortality. In addition to their in vitro and in vivo anti-cancer effects, naturally occurring soy isoflavones have anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties, and have been shown to reduce side effects of therapy in adult oncology clinical trials. This study will examine the effect of genistein, the major isoflavone component in soybeans and the most extensively studied of the soy isoflavones, on short-term side effects of myelosuppressive chemotherapy in pediatric cancer patients. Subjects will be randomized to receive either: a) 30 mg genistein daily throughout chemotherapy Cycles 1 and 2 and placebo during chemotherapy Cycles 3 and 4; or b) placebo daily during chemotherapy Cycles 1 and 2 and 30 mg genistein daily during chemotherapy Cycles 3 and 4. Investigators hypothesize that subjects will have fewer short-term therapy-related side effects during cycles of chemotherapy given in conjunction with genistein supplementation than cycles given with placebo.
In the setting of progressive or recurrent cancer, adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients, parents, and healthcare providers (HCP) are faced with multiple therapeutic options. Each treatment option has a unique risk/benefit ratio, resulting in a need to trade one desirable outcome for another or accept acute toxicities and treatment-related morbidity to increase the chance of survival. Adding to the complexity of this decision, stake holders characterize and value the risk/benefit ratios differently. This study seeks to learn what things are important to an adolescent or young adult with cancer, parents, and health care providers when making decisions about their treatment choices. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: To quantify the relative importance of various factors believed to be important to adolescent and young adult patients with cancer, parents, and health care providers when choosing between treatment options in the hypothetical situation of progressive or refractory disease.
Open label, non-randomized, dose escalation and expansion Phase Ia/b trial to evaluate the safety and tolerability of the combination of neratinib plus paclitaxel, trastuzumab and pertuzumab to determine the recommended Phase II/III dose of this combination. Neratinib will be given once daily days 1-21 and should be taken orally with food. Paclitaxel and trastuzumab will be given IV on days 1, 8, and 15 out of 21 day cycles. Pertuzumab will be given IV every 3 weeks on day 1 out of 21-day cycles. Each cycle will be 21 days in duration. Patients will continue on treatment until disease progression or intolerable toxicity.