View clinical trials related to Advanced Melanoma.
Filter by:This is a Phase IIa, single-arm, multicentre, open-label clinical trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of RC48-ADC in the treatment of HER2 Variant (Mutation, Amplification, Overexpression) advanced melanoma.
Describe the safety, tolerability, efficacy and approaches to prescribing prolgolimab in the standard dosing regimen of 1 mg / kg every 2 weeks in patients with advanced melanoma in routine practice. Prolgolimab (Forteca, formerly BCD 100) is an IgG1 anti-PD-1 (programmed cell death protein 1) monoclonal antibody containing the Fc-silencing 'LALA' mutation.
An open-label, multicenter phase II clinical study to evaluate safety, efficacy and PK of HLX208 for advanced melanoma with BRAF V600 mutation
This is a non-therapeutic study assessing peripheral T cell determinants of response and resistance to immunotherapy in patients with advanced melanoma.The hypothesis is that systemic T cells traffic into the tumor microenvironment (TME) can predict response and resistance to immunotherapy. These systemic tumor directed T cells can be defined by tumor/blood small conditional RNA (scRNA) using T cell receptor (TCR) as a barcode and can help predict response to PD-1 therapy.
This study is to investigate the safety and efficacy of tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy in patients with advanced melanoma. Autologous TILs are expanded from tumor resections or biopsies and infused i.v. into the patient after NMA lymphodepletion treatment with hydroxychloroquine(600mg,single-dose) and cyclophosphamide.
To find the highest tolerable dose of IACS-6274 that can be given alone, in combination with bevacizumab and paclitaxel, or in combination with capivasertib to patients who have solid tumors. The safety and tolerability of the study drug(s) will also be studied.
This phase Ib/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of plinabulin in combination with radiation therapy and immunotherapy in patients with select cancers that have spread to other places in the body (advanced) after progression on PD-1 or PD-L1 targeted antibodies. Plinabulin blocks tumor growth by targeting both new and existing blood vessels going to the tumor as well as killing tumor cells. Immunotherapy may induce changes in body's immune system and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Radiation therapy uses high energy x-rays to kill tumor cells and shrink tumors. Giving plinabulin in combination with radiation therapy and immunotherapy may work better in treating advanced cancers.
This study is a multi-center, phase Ia/Ib, open clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of TWP-101 in patients with advanced melanoma and urothelial carcinoma. This study consists of two parts (Part A and Part B). Part A was a dose escalation study, and Part B was a dose expansion study.
A phase I clinical study evaluating LBL-007 in the treatment of subjects with advanced solid tumors
This phase II trial investigates how well biomarkers on PET/CT imaging drive early discontinuation of anti-PD-1 therapy in patients with stage IIIB-IV melanoma that cannot be removed by surgery (unresectable). Anti-PD-1 therapy has become a standard therapy option for patients with unresectable melanoma. This trial is being done to determine if doctors can safely shorten the use of standard of care anti-PD1 therapy for melanoma by using biomarkers seen on PET/CT imaging and tumor biopsy.