Clinical Trials Logo

Toxicity, Drug clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Toxicity, Drug.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT05652673 Recruiting - Immunotherapy Clinical Trials

Safe Stop Ipilimumab-nivolumab (IPI-NIVO) Trial

Start date: February 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Safe Stop IPI-NIVO Trial: Early discontinuation of nivolumab upon achieving a (confirmed) complete or partial response in patients with irresectable stage III or metastatic melanoma treated with first-line ipilimumab-nivolumab

NCT ID: NCT05512169 Recruiting - Pediatric Cancer Clinical Trials

Pharmacogenomic Association Study in Indian Children With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

MPGx-INDALL
Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A five-year prospective observational cohort study. The study is focused on observing the relation between static germline variants and therapeutic response in Indian children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The project is an International multicenter setup. This collaborative research project between Switzerland and India includes one main center in Geneva that has conceptualized, designed, received grants for the study and two investigating centers in India (Puducherry and New-Delhi) involved in study design, patient care and recruitment for this specific study. All the participants for the study will be recruited form these two centers in India, and no patient recruitment is planned at main center i.e. Geneva. The study will be conducted in two phases. The first aims to investigate genetic predisposition (static germline variants) to early chemotherapy treatment related toxicities (TRTs). The second aims to investigate somatic genetic markers associated with the efficacy of steroid treatment among patients undergoing the standardized IciCLe-ALL-14 treatment protocol. A total of 500 children with ALL will be recruited to investigate primary objective of the study i.e. TRT, and a subset of 250 patients will be included to investigate another research question i.e. response to steroid therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05355168 Recruiting - Toxicity, Drug Clinical Trials

Neoadjuvant Chemoradiotherapy Combined With Camrelizumab and Nimotuzumab for Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery has been the standard modality for locally advance esophageal carcinoma. According to CROSS study, the pathological complete remission rate achieved by paclitaxel and carboplatin with 41.4 Gy/23f was 49% for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. But the 10-year overall survival rate was only 38%. How to increase the overall survival of esophageal carcinoma is a pivotal task. Both of Camrelizumab and Nimotuzumab have been demonstrated to be efficacious in the neoadjuvant treatment for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma in some small sample-size trials. Therefore, this trial is designed to combine adjuvant chemoradiotherapy with Camrelizumab and Nimotuzumab for resectable & potentially resectable locally advanced esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and explore the safety and primary efficacy of such combination.

NCT ID: NCT04916392 Completed - Toxicity, Drug Clinical Trials

Observation Study of the Pharmacokinetics of Adductor Canal Block

Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

With the aging of the population, osteoarthritis of knees and hips become major orthopedic problems worldwide. Osteoarthritis of the knees and hips is associated with a significant pain problem and functional disability. Total joints replacement is the ultimate surgical procedure to deal with such problems. Multimodal analgesia, including periarticular local infiltration of analgesia (LIA), regional nerve block using adductor canal block (ACB), opioid and non-opioid have been shown to be effective in managing postoperative pain. Regional nerve block using femoral nerve block or adductor canal block (ACB) is also a well-established analgesic technique after total knee replacement. Standard bupivacaine (SB), levobupivacaine, ropivacaine were used in ACB in these studies. Whether combining ACB with periarticular LIA has the additional benefit of prolonging analgesia or with synergistic effect remains controversial, because the number of RCTs conducted is not enough. Liposomal bupivacaine (LB) may further prolong the analgesic effect of ACB, as the therapeutic levels of bupivacaine are below the toxic range and sustained for 72 hours after injection. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and systemic levels of serum bupivacaine following adductor canal block using LB 66.5mg in patients undergoing TKA with LIA over a 72-hour period. This also serves as a pilot study to determine the dose and timing of blood taking for serum bupivacaine level of a previously IRB approved study - "Comparing the efficacy of combining periarticular local infiltration of analgesia and adductor canal block using liposomal bupivacaine and standard bupivacaine- A prospective randomized controlled trial".

NCT ID: NCT04824352 Suspended - Effect of Drug Clinical Trials

Apatinib Plus IE Chemotherapy (Ifosfamide and Etoposide) for Relapsed or Refractory Osteosarcoma

AIEO
Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Apatinib has led to positive responses in the treatment of osteosarcoma refractory to first-line chemotherapy. However, apatinib demonstrates only short-lived activity, and the disease control of musculoskeletal lesions is worse than that of pulmonary lesions. This treatment failure has been partly overcome by the addition of ifosfamide and etoposide (IE). We have ever retrospectively compared the activity of apatinib + IE in relapsed or refractory osteosarcoma in two sarcoma centers in China and concluded that for osteosarcoma with multiple sites of metastasis, apatinib + IE demonstrated clinically meaningful antitumor activity and delayed disease progression in patients with recurrent or refractory osteosarcoma after failure of chemotherapy. However to overcome the influence of other interventions on the outcome, we are currently performing a prospective trial to investigate this combination, from which more accurate data on this treatment strategy are expected.

NCT ID: NCT04690231 Completed - Effect of Drug Clinical Trials

Apatinib + Ifosfamide and Etoposide for Relapsed or Refractory Osteosarcoma

Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Today, using a multi-modal approach consisting of preoperative (neoadjuvant) systemic polychemotherapy followed by local surgical therapy and then postoperative (adjuvant) chemotherapy, long-term, disease-free survival can be achieved in 60- 70% of osteosarcoma patients. However treatment options for osteosarcomas, especially in the setting of metastatic or unresectable disease, are very scarce. Apatinib has been proved to be an effective agent to prolong progression-free survival in advanced osteosarcoma. But after 4-6 months' treatment, secondary resistance always occurred with musculoskeletal lesions' progression or new metastasis. Nowadays giving therapeutic doses of IE concurrently with anti-angiogenesis tyrosine kinase inhibitors is a conceptually attractive strategy for treating patients with refractory osteosarcoma according to prospective trial of lenvatinib +IE reported by Gaspar et al at 2019 ESMO and 2020 ESMO. Thus This study was designed to review our experience in real world for off-label use and characterize the toxicity profile of concurrent apatinib+IE and IE alone in patients with relapsed or refractory osteosarcoma.

NCT ID: NCT04499885 Recruiting - Toxicity, Drug Clinical Trials

Potential Role of Gastric Lavage by Paraffin Oil in Acute Aluminum Phosphide Poisoning

Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Potential Role of Gastric Lavage by Paraffin Oil in Acute Aluminum Phosphide Poisoning.

NCT ID: NCT04351308 Recruiting - Osteosarcoma Clinical Trials

Comparison of MAPI+Camrelizumab Versus API+Apatinib Versus MAPI in Patients With a Poor Response to Preoperative Chemotherapy for Newly Diagnosed High-grade Osteosarcoma

MAPAC
Start date: May 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Treatment strategies for high-grade osteosarcoma with multidrug chemotherapy and resection result in 3-year event-free survival of 60-70%. The most common factors predicting survival are presence of metastases, histological response to preoperative chemotherapy and complete surgical resection. Four of the active drugs in osteosarcoma include cisplatin, doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate and ifosfamide and this combination (MAPI), given preoperatively and postoperatively, is widely used for the treatment of osteosarcoma in China. Apatinib also has activity in advanced setting and when incorporated into the treatment of patients with metastatic disease seemed to improve progression-free survival. Combination of apatinib and camrelizumab resulted in durable therapuetic effect in selected cases. Though EURAMOUS-1 suggested that changing chemotherapy postoperatively on the basis of histological response did not improve outcomes. The exploratory study with radomised design to compare combination of chemotherapy with target drug or combination of chemotherapy with anti-PD-1 antibody versus standard chemotherapy has not been tried yet. Thus we aim to investigate the efficacy and toxicity of these combiantions versus standard chemotherapy in this study.

NCT ID: NCT04260113 Completed - Efficacy Clinical Trials

Apatinib for Inoperable Advanced Chondrosarcoma

AIAC
Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Anti-angiogenesis Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have been proved to show promising effects on prolonging progression-free survival (PFS) for advanced chondrosarcoma after failure of standard multimodal Therapy. Methylsulfonic apatinib is one of those TKIs which specifically inhibits VEGFR-2. This study summarizes the experience of two Peking University affiliated hospitals in off-label use of apatinib in the treatment of extensively pre-treated chondrosarcoma.

NCT ID: NCT03638375 Active, not recruiting - Adverse Drug Event Clinical Trials

TIL and Anti-PD1 in Metastatic Melanoma

ACTME
Start date: July 31, 2018
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The ACTME study is an investigator initiated, single center phase I/II clinical trial for patients with progressive unresectable stage III or stage IV melanoma. The trial consists of both a phase I part to determine safety and feasibility and a phase II part to evaluate first clinical activity of IFN-alpha, nivolumab and TIL. The treatment with IFN-alpha will be added after the combination of TIL and nivolumab has proven to be safe.