View clinical trials related to Solid Tumor.
Filter by:Honest, clear, and empathetic communication between pediatric oncologists (POs) and parents of children with cancer (POCCs) is imperative to facilitating therapeutic alliance and ensuring that medical management aligns with the families' goals of care. Communication is particularly important during conversations about disease reevaluation, which often necessitate parental decision-making in the context of emotional distress. POs employ a spectrum of communication styles and strategies during challenging conversations, and there is no consensus regarding linguistic or thematic metrics for high quality communication of upsetting information. In order to better understand how POs communicate difficult information to POCCs, the investigators propose a pilot study designed to accomplish the following primary aim: Primary Objective: - To identify recurrent verbal and nonverbal (e.g. the use of pauses/silence) communication techniques employed by POs in the delivery of difficult prognostic information to POCCs through content analysis of audio-recorded conversations between POs and parents of children with high risk cancer at the time of disease reevaluation. The study expects to enroll up to: 80 patient participants, 80 parents, and 15 primary pediatric oncologists (total = 175). Non-primary oncologist members of the clinical care team, extended family members, or friends of the family may also participate, if they choose to do so.
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 determine the dose of poly-ICLC that is safe and tolerable when it is combined with pembrolizumab in patients with colon cancer. This study will also evaluate how the combination of pembrolizumab and poly-ICLC activates the immune system in the patient's blood and inside the tumor; how it affects the size and number of tumor(s) in each patient; and how effective the combination is in patients with colon cancer that is unlikely to respond to pembrolizumab alone.
This study aims to screen tumor molecular profile for better selection of anticancer treatment, in particular, allocation to clinical trials if available.
This clinical trial is the first clinical trial to study Durvalumab, a checkpoint inhibitor which stimulates the patient's own immune system to act against cancer cells in children and adolescents. This trial will assess the safety and tolerability of Durvalumab in children and adolescents and also study how Durvalumab is processed in their bodies.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of anti-programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) checkpoint antibody LY3300054 in participants with advanced refractory solid tumors.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of the study drug known as LY3039478 in combination with other anticancer agents in participants with advanced or metastatic solid tumors.
This is an open-label, non-randomized, dose escalation phase I trial to evaluate safety and tolerability of SHR-1210 in patients with advanced solid tumors. The primary objective is to assess safety and tolerability of SHR-1210 and identify recommended phase II doses of SHR-1210 in patients with advanced solid tumors.
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.
This is a multicenter, open-label, safety study. Eligible subjects will be adults with advanced malignancies. The study includes a pretreatment and treatment phase. The pretreatment phase consists of screening and baseline periods. The treatment phase consists of 4-week treatment periods and a follow-up period.