View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Renal Cell.
Filter by:Study 516-008 is an open-label Phase 1 dose escalation/Phase 1b dose expansion study evaluating the safety and tolerability, clinical activity, and PK of sitravatinib in combination with nivolumab and ipilimumab for the treatment of ccRCC and potentially other solid tumor types.
RCC (Renal Cell Carcinoma) is the most common form of kidney cancer, accounting for 2-3% of all adult malignancies and for 90% of all kidney cancers. The incidence of RCC has steadily increased over the past two decades, showing a plateau in recent years. Many patients with RCC remain asymptomatic until late disease stages and other patients have disease at diagnosis (metastatic RCC or mRCC). Recently, the tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) cabozantinib was approved as a first-line therapy for patients with advanced clear-cell RCC (ccRCC). Cabozantinib was initially approved for patients previously treated with antiangiogenic therapy based on the phase 3 METEOR study, which demonstrated a clinical benefit compared with everolimus. Immunotherapy has been also developed in ccRCC. The frontline treatment paradigm for ccRCC has evolved, particularly for intermediate-/poor-risk patients, with the recent addition of cabozantinib and nivolumab/ipilimumab (immunotherapy), but overall survival data are needed to understand their benefit-to-risk profiles compared with established therapies. In October 2016, the Spanish Agency of medicines (AEMPS) granted the temporary Authorization for special use to Cabometyx® 20/40/60 mg within a Managed Access Program (MAP) for the treatment of advanced RCC in adults following prior VEGF-targeted therapy (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor targeted therapy). The MAP allows the possibility of using a medicinal product which is not yet commercially available or approved. By the end of the MAP period, on July 2017, 136 patients had been included by 61 centers who received at least one dose of Cabometyx® for the treatment of advanced RCC. Since then, Cabometyx® 20/40/60 mg was made commercially available for the treatment of advanced RCC in adults following prior VEGF-targeted therapy. After the commercialization of Cabometyx® in July 2017 in Spain, the inclusion of new patients in the MAP was closed but those patients that were already included continued receiving Cabometyx® free of charge until clinical decision. In July 2018, the European Commission approved a new indication for adult patients previously untreated with intermediate or poor risk. Based on this rationale, the aim of this study is to obtain safety and effectiveness information regarding the use of cabozantinib in a non-selected RCC population, both in patients that received this agent under the MAP or under routine clinical prescription (real-world [RW]).
89Zr-TLX250 is a carbonic anydrase IX (CAIX)-targeted imaging agent that is under clinical development as a non-invasive diagnostic imaging agent for teh detection of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). The Phase 1 study part of this study is to confirm the safety/tolerability and to evaluate the pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) in subjects with suspected renal cell carcinoma (RCC) including clear cell renal cell carcinoma. The Phase 2 component of the study is to to evaluate the sensitivity/specificity of using 89Zr-TLX250 PET/CT images to detect RCC and ccRCC in patients with suspected RCC.
The purpose of this observational study is to collect contemporary real-world treatment patterns, clinical outcomes, humanistic burden (including patient-reported disease-specific Health-related Quality of Life (HRQoL), and treatment- related adverse events (AEs) or adverse reactions (ARs) among Advanced Renal Cell Carcinoma (aRCC) patients initiating first-line systemic therapy.
This is a prospective, single-arm, monocentric translational study designed to evaluate possible biomarkers of resistance to the first line of therapy with pazopanib in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) who have not received systemic therapy in both the adjuvant and metastatic phases.
This is an open-label, non-randomized, multicenter, dose-escalation and expansion study in patients with selected solid tumors.
Renal cell carcinoma accounts for 2-3% of all cancers in western countries. Brazilian kidney cancer data show an incidence of 6,270 new cases for 2018. New target-molecular therapies have emerged in recent years for the treatment of metastatic kidney cancer. Due to the heterogeneity of these patients and the lack of specific markers, therapeutic is currently based on clinical and laboratory analysis. The research for predictive biomarkers may better characterize the kidney cancer therapeutic management. The objectives are to identify a predictive gene expression profile in patients with advanced clear cell renal carcinoma treated with first-line sunitinib and correlate it with rate response, seeking to identify a predictive gene expression profile. As secondary objectives, the investigators will compare the gene expression profile found, with global survival and clinical-pathological characteristics. Materials and methods: To determine through systematic data collection the epidemiological profile, clinical-pathological characteristics, response rate, disease free survival and overall survival of 60 patients with metastatic clear cell renal carcinoma who used sunitinib in the first line between 2009 and 2018 at the Barretos Cancer Hospital. For evaluation of gene expression profile, the investigators will use a panel of a panel with 770 genes related to disease progression using nanostring technology. Keywords: Renal Cell Carcinoma; Sunitinib; Biomarkers; Gene expression; Nanostring.
Patients with renal carcinoma was reported at high incidence of perioperative pulmonary embolism from current study. The investigators aimed to determine the incidence and outcome of this group of patient in the tertiary-care, university hospital and the rate of intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography utility and outcome.
Renal cell cancer (RCC) is one of the most important urogenital tumors because of it's high mortality and increasing incidence. RCC, which accounts about 3% of all malignant tumors in the adults, is the most lethal urogenital cancer. The high mortality rate stimulate investigator groups to study RCC pathogenesis including immunological part. It is interesting that immunotherapy was firstly started in patients with metastatic RCC using IL-2 and interferon gamma. The first results were promising but the exact mechanism of acting was not found. In the RCC, as in the others tumors, immune cells (T lymphocytes, NK and NKT cells) are responsible for main antitumor effect. Their effect was caused by cytotoxic activity on the tumor cells. In the investigation investigators will determine patterns of aggregation of tumor infiltrating immune cells in the blood, healthy kidney and carcinomatous tissue. But, presence of this cells not implicated that this cells are active. Their activity will be determined by proofing cytotoxicity of different subgroup of immune cells. In that way investigators will present different patterns of aggregation of tumor infiltrating immune cells and their cytotoxicity which will direct that this cells are active with antitumor effect. Correlation of collected data with classical prognostic factors in the patients with RCC as tumor staging, tumor grading (Fuhrman) and histological subtype will help to determine some immunological factors as possible new prognostic factors. For conclusion, the results of this study will allow better understanding of RCC pathogenesis, specially their immunological part and become a foundation for the future investigations.
The study aims to assess treatment patterns and outcomes in advanced RCC patients in real world clinical practices across various real world databases. Four databases will be evaluated