View clinical trials related to Advanced Solid Cancers.
Filter by:The main purpose of this study is to characterize the safety, tolerability, dose limiting toxicities, best route of administration, maximum tolerated dose, maximum administered dose, or alternative dose of BMS-986301 alone or in combination with nivolumab and ipilimumab in participants with cancers that have failed to respond to T cell checkpoint inhibiting antibodies.
This Phase 1/1b, open-label, first-in-human, monotherapy study will be conducted in 2 parts. Part A will consist of the SRF231 monotherapy dose-escalation portion of the study, and will enroll up to 48 patients with advanced solid tumors and hematological cancers. Part B will include monotherapy expansion cohorts in advanced solid and hematologic cancers to further examine SRF231 as monotherapy (100 patients total).
This is a phase 1b, open label trial of ADI-PEG 20 (36 mg/m2) weekly in combination with pembrolizumab (1 and 2 mg/kg or 200 mg) every three weeks. Assessment of safety and tolerability of drug combination
This is a phase 1 study of investigational agent CFI-402257 in patients with advanced cancer. The purpose of this study is to see how safe and tolerable CFI-402257 is in cancer patients as well as the pharmacokinetics (PK). This study is the first time that CFI-402257 is given to humans.
This is an open-label, Phase 1/2, multicenter study to evaluate the safety, PK, and PD of an anti-CTLA-4 human monoclonal antibody (AGEN1884) in subjects with advanced or refractory cancer and in subjects who have progressed during treatment with a PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor as their most recent therapy. The phase 1 portion of the study has been completed; It enrolled adult subjects with refractory, advanced cancer in a 3+3 dose escalation cohort. The phase 2 portion consists of up to 60 patients who have progressed during treatment with an approved or investigational PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor as their most recent therapy (2-6 weeks prior to first dose of study drug).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate safety and the pharmacokinetic characteristics of docetaxel between two docetaxel products in patients with advanced solid cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine safety, tolerability and maximum tolerated dose of BMS-863233 in subjects advanced and/or Metastatic solid tumors.
For cancer patients with inadequate pain relief, a switch to an alternative opioid is the preferred option for symptomatic improvement. However, multiple opioids are often simultaneously administered for anecdotal reasons. The present study isdesigned to assess the analgesic profiles of two different strategies in chronic cancer pain: the opioid rotation from oxycodone to transdermal fentanyl and the combination of oral oxycodone and transdermal fentanyl.
Rapamycin is a drug that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (government) for use in patients receiving a kidney transplant to prevent the patient's body from rejecting the transplanted kidney. It has shown antitumor effects in the laboratory, but has not been approved at this time for the treatment of cancer. Abraxane is a new form of chemotherapy that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer, and is a promising drug that is being evaluated in clinical trials for treatment of other cancers. This is a phase I study designed to find out if different doses of Rapamycin, when combined with Abraxane, are safe and well tolerated.