View clinical trials related to Advanced Solid Tumor.
Filter by:Studies done in the laboratory have demonstrated beneficial effects of ON 01910.Na, a new, unapproved drug, when it is used in combination either irinotecan and oxaliplatin, two approved, extensively used anti-cancer drugs. In these laboratory studies, mice implanted with cells (Bel-7402 cells) that came from a human tumor were used as a model of liver cancer. In mice that were not treated, the Bel-7402 cells formed very large tumors. In mice that were treated with ON 01910.Na, irinotecan or oxaliplatin alone, growth of tumors was reduced compared to the untreated group. When a combination of ON 01910.Na and irinotecan or of ON 01910.Na and oxaliplatin was used to treat the mice, tumor growth was completely inhibited. Another observation in these studies was that toxicity did not increase when the combinations were used. These results and similar results from other studies support the hypothesis that a combination of ON 01910.Na and irinotecan or of ON 01910.Na and oxaliplatin would be an effective and tolerable treatment for liver and other types of cancer. The primary objective of this phase 1 study is to find out what doses of ON 01910.Na in combination with either irinotecan or oxaliplatin are safe and tolerable in patients with liver and other types of cancer.
This study will characterize the safety, tolerability, biological activity, and pharmacokinetics of LBH589 in Japanese patients with advanced solid tumors whose disease has progressed despite standard therapies, or for whom no standard therapy exists.
The purpose of the trial is to identify the recommended dose of sorafenib and sirolimus for combination therapy in subsequent phase 2 trials.
A Phase I open label dose escalation study to assess the safety and tolerability of AZD2171 following single and multiple oral doses in patients in Japan with advanced solid malignancies. In addition there will be an expanded cohort multi-centre study phase with NSCLC patient and CRC patients
A multicentre, 2-part study to assess the safety and tolerability of once daily oral doses of AZD2171 when administered with various anticancer regimens (part A) and to confirm the tolerability of its combination with FOLFOX (part B).
Single centre recruiting approximately 80 patients who are given a rising single, followed by multiple, ascending oral dose of AZD2171, assessing the safety and tolerability of AZD2171 in patients with solid tumors and metastatic liver disease.
The goal of this study is to determine whether a significant pharmacokinetic interaction exists between rapamycin and sorafenib. This study will also look at the toxicity of the combination of rapamycin and sorafenib and the antitumor activity of the combination in subjects with advanced cancers.