View clinical trials related to Carcinoma.
Filter by:Patients with a diagnosis listed under "conditions" below are eligible to be considered for the EAP. These conditions must be serious or life-threatening at the time of enrollment and appropriate, comparable, or satisfactory alternative treatments must have been tried without clinical success. Patients with conditions not listed under "conditions" below are not eligible for the tazemetostat EAP.
Compassionate use access to molibresib/GSK525762 for eligible participant with NUT Midline Carcinoma; indication is a seriously debilitating or life-threatening disease.
This is an Expanded Access Program (EAP) available to patients who have advanced cancers, who have failed or progressed on standard of care systemic therapy and do not qualify for ongoing clinical trials.
The objective of this program is to provide access to cemiplimab (REGN2810) to patients with metastatic cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (mCSCC) or locally advanced cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (laCSCC) who are not candidates for surgery prior to cemiplimab (REGN2810) being commercially available.
The purpose of this study is to provide brigatinib for those patients with locally advanced and/or metastatic patients with ALK+ NSCLC on an expanded access basis due to their inability to meet eligibility criteria for on-going recruiting trials, inability to participate in other clinical trials (e.g., poor performance status, lack of geographic proximity), or because other medical interventions are not considered appropriate or acceptable.
This is an expanded access study with ANG1005 treatment for two individual patients from Protocol ANG1005-CLN-03 with WHO Grade III Anaplastic Astrocytoma and WHO Grade III Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma and one individual patient from Protocol ANG1005-CLN-04 with Recurrent Brain Metastases and Leptomeningeal Carcinomatosis.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of MitoGel in the treatment of UTUC in a human subject with low-grade UTUC which is endoscopically unresectable or rapidly recurring, and in whom nephrectomy would likely result in the need for permanent hemodialysis. The study drug would be obtained under the single patient access program approved by the FDA. The patient would then undergo instillation of MitoGel into the affected kidney. The catheter would be left indwelling in the ureter and would be externalized. The ureteral and urethral catheters would remain indwelling for the duration of the 6 treatments, which would occur twice weekly for 3 weeks or once weekly for 6 weeks. Following the final instillation, the catheters would be removed. The patient would then undergo ureteroscopic evaluation at 3 months following the final instillation of MitoGel. The total duration of study would be 3 months. The total number of study patients is 1.
Patient with advanced liver cancer (cancer that has spread to other parts of the body) continues to receive the study drug (G-202) even though patient no longer meets the criteria to be a part of the main treatment study. Patient's cancer responded well to receiving G-202 in the main study and will receive G-202 at the same dose given in the main study.
This is a single arm study with axitinib in patients with advanced kidney cancer (clear cell variant), who have failed first line therapy. The study will recruit a maximum of 30 patients from 2 countries including Australia and Canada. Patients will be followed up for efficacy, safety and health related outcomes.
The aim of this study is to provide this investigational drug to patients who cannot be optimally treated with conventional therapies and to collect efficacy and safety data on the use of Metvix PDT in subjects with field actinic keratoses, large/multiple superficial basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) or Bowen's disease.