View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Transitional Cell.
Filter by:To evaluate the ability of [68Ga]N188 to detect nectin-4 overexpression in patients with urothelial carcinoma, especially in patients with recurrent or advanced bladder cancer.
A open-label, single-arm, phase II trial to study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of trastuzumab and pyrotinib in treating HER2 positive patients who have previously treated, locally advanced, or metastatic urothelial carcinoma.
This is a Phase 3, Open-Label, Multicenter, Randomised, Controlled Study designed to compare RC48-ADC in Combination With JS001 to Chemotherapy Alone in Previously Untreated HER2-Expressing Unresectable Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma.
The ARON-2 study retrospectively analyze patients treated with pembrolizumab as first-line therapy in patients platinum-unfit or as second-line therapy in patients progressed after previous platinum-based chemotherapy. The amendment has been designed to also analyze patients treated with enfortumab vedotin progressed to previous platinum-based chemotherapy and anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor.
To evaluate the effect of hyperthermic intravesical perfusion on the risk of intraoperative implantation of muscle-invasive bladder urothelial carcinoma and its safety.
This phase I trial tests the safety and tolerability of an experimental personalized vaccine when given by itself and with pembrolizumab in treating patients with solid tumor cancers that have spread to other places in the body (advanced). The experimental vaccine is designed target certain proteins (neoantigens) on individuals' tumor cells. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as pembrolizumab, may help the body's immune system attack the cancer, and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Giving the personalized neoantigen peptide-based vaccine with pembrolizumab may be safe and effective in treating patients with advanced solid tumors.
This is a prospective, single-institution, single-arm, phase II clinical trial that tests a novel strategy of neoadjuvant Sasanlimab, an immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI), in combination with stereotactic body radiation therapy as an in-situ vaccination in patients, who are ineligible to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy and undergoing radical cystectomy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
This study will test whether enfortumab vedotin combined with pembrolizumab is an effective treatment for people with bladder cancer (urothelial carcinoma) involving the lymph nodes who are going to have surgery to remove their cancer (cystectomy). The researchers will look at whether treatment with enfortumab vedotin and pembrolizumab before surgery can get rid of cancer within the lymph nodes. They will also try to find out if this combination of drugs is effective at shrinking participants' cancer before their surgery. The researchers think that a combination of enfortumab vedotin and pembrolizumab may help people with this disease because both drugs are designed to help the immune system attack and kill cancer cells. The researchers think the drugs may be more effective if given in combination rather than on their own.
SURE-01 is a neoadjuvant phase 2, open-label, non-randomized, singlecohort study in patients with urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. Patients will be consecutively enrolled and treated. The primary objective of the study is to assess whether sacituzumab govitecan results in pathological complete response (in patients with Muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer who cannot receive or refuse cisplatin-based chemotherapy). Secondary objectives were to evaluate the radiological response of those patients with measurable disease; to evaluate the surgical and medical safety of neoadjuvant therapy; to assess survival outcomes (event-free survival and overall survival).
The aim of this study is to explore efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant nivolumab for non-metastatic upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC), and explore the potential predictive biomarkers of immunotherapy.