View clinical trials related to Carcinoma.
Filter by:This is a phase II study for patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck who have residual disease following definitive therapy with radiation (with or without systemic therapy). Patients must be diagnosed with residual disease within 24 weeks of completion of radiation therapy. Residual disease must be biopsy proven before the patient can consent to the trial, and can be either from lymph nodes in the neck, or from the primary tumor site. Prior to beginning study therapy patients are evaluated by an ENT to determine if they have disease amenable to surgical resection. Both resectable and unresectable patients will be eligible for participation in the study.
This is a multicenter, open-label, phase 1 study conducted to test intratumoral injections of TTI-621 in subjects that have relapsed and refractory percutaneously accessible solid tumors or mycosis fungoides. The study will be performed in two different parts. Part 1 is the Dose Escalation phase and Part 2 is the Dose Expansion phase. The purpose of this study is to characterize the safety profile of TTI-621 and to determine the optimal dose and delivery schedule of TTI-621. In addition, the safety and antitumor activity of TTI-621 will be evaluated in combination with other anti-cancer agents or radiation.
The purpose of this trial is to determine the benefit of the combination of nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine given for 6 cycles, followed by maintenance nab-paclitaxel alone, in patients with cisplatin-ineligible or cisplatin-incurable advanced urothelial carcinoma (UC).
This pilot phase 0 trial studies how well enzalutamide works before surgery in treating patients with kidney cancer. Androgens are a type of hormone produced by the body that may cause kidney tumors to grow. Anti-hormone therapy, such as enzalutamide, may lessen the amount of androgens produced by the body and keep kidney tumors from growing.
This phase 1b trial studies the biologic effect of 9cUAB30 on early stage breast cancer. 9cUAB30 is a retinoid X receptor (RXR)-selective retinoid that acts in a tissue selective manner with the goal of minimizing side effects, a necessary feature of agents under development for cancer prevention.
This study will enroll patients with non-metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) that have residual Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA after curative radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy. The purpose is to evaluate the survival in these patients treated with apatinib (YN968D1), an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (phase IIa) and to compare the survival in these patients treated with apatinib versus placebo (phase IIb).
This prospective multicenter non-randomized controlled study evaluates the efficacy and safety of treatment with Sorafenib (Nevaxar) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma with microvascular invasion after radical resection compared to conventional therapies.
Phase II study (n=30) to evaluate the safety and feasibility of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) with fiducial markers in inoperable patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the third cause of death by cancer. For patients with inoperable advanced HCC, systematic therapy with Sorafenib, a multikinase inhibitor that has both antiangiogenic and antiproliferative effect, is the only therapeutic with proven survival benefits. However, the efficacy of Sorafenib remains inconstant with a media overall survival of 10,7 months and a disease control rate only 35 to 43%; moreover, the overall incidence of treatment-related adverse event is 80%. Thus, it appears essential to find an early and accurate way to determine which patients are best responding to therapy in order to avoid the toxicity and cost of ineffective therapy. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) has shown limited performance in the setting of HCC because of lack of sensitivity, in particular for well-differentiated tumours. However FDG uptake is related to proliferation rate and is an efficient marker survival following liver transplantation and selective internal radiation therapy. Moreover, the addition of a dynamic first-pass acquisition to the standard static scan provides better characterization of the tumour by adding information on tumour perfusion. FCH which reflects lipids metabolism and specifically choline kinase activity, has shown promising results for detection of HCC when compared with FDG alone. Moreover, choline activity is related to a kinase pathway in mammalian cells, which is specifically inhibited by Sorafenib. However FCH uptake remains inconstant in HCC, and is related to tumour differentiation, by opposition to FDG. Therefore, several studies have suggested that combined evaluation of tumour glucose and lipid metabolism could play a complementary role for the evaluation of HCC in the setting of detection, staging and to predict recurrence following surgical resection. Thus, the investigator hypothesize that the combination of FDG and FCH may be the most accurate imaging evaluation of HCC. Thus the aim of the present study is to determine the predictive performance of survival of lipid and glucose metabolism and perfusion changes during Sorafenib therapy in patients with advanced HCC.
This is a study to determine the safety of CDX-014 and effectiveness (how well the drug works).