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Colorectal Cancer clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06195514 Available - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Expanded Access to TAK-113 for Adults With Metastatic Colorectal Cancer (mCRC)

Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

The expanded access program allows people to gain access to an unlicensed treatment on compassionate grounds. This expanded access program provides adults with refractory metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) and who cannot neither adequately be treated by current standard of care nor participate in a clinical study access to TAK-113 until TAK-113 becomes commercially available in the respective country or the adult does no longer seem to benefit from treatment with TAK-113.

NCT ID: NCT04566393 Available - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Expanded Access to Ulixertinib (BVD-523) in Patients With Advanced MAPK Pathway-Altered Malignancies

Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

The objective of this expanded access program is to provide ulixertinib (BVD-523) for compassionate use in advanced cancer patients with MAPK pathway-altered solid tumor(s), including but not limited to KRAS, NRAS, HRAS, BRAF, MEK, and ERK mutations who have incomplete response to or have exhausted available therapies. Ulixertinib is available for treatment as monotherapy or in combination with other clinically tolerable agent(s), conditionally approved by the drug manufacturer.

NCT ID: NCT04100694 Available - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Early Access Program Providing HER2/HER3 Bispecific Antibody, MCLA-128, for a Patient With Advanced NRG1-Fusion Positive Solid Tumor

Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

Merus is providing single patient/named access to the HER2/HER3 bispecific antibody, MCLA-128, to patients with advanced NRG1-fusion positive solid tumor under this early access program who are ineligible for an ongoing MCLA-128 clinical trial or have other considerations that prevent access to MCLA-128 through an existing clinical trial. Participating sites will be added as they apply for and are approved for the EAP. A medical doctor must decide whether the potential benefit outweighs the risk of receiving an investigational therapy based on the individual's medical history and program eligibility criteria.