View clinical trials related to Kidney Cancer.
Filter by:This study is an open-label, international, multi-center, Phase 2 study in adult patients with recurrent, locally-advanced or metastatic solid tumors, which harbor the NRG1 gene fusion.
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.
Kidney cancer is one of the ten most common malignancies, and the incidence is increasing in recent year. From Hong Kong Cancer Registry, there was about 670 new cases diagnosed in 2016, and had been increased by 46% compared to 2007.Within the broad classification of kidney cancers, renal cell carcinoma (RCC) accounts for approximately 85% of all cases and greater than 90% of all renal malignancies. Despite the improved understanding and also diagnosis for kidney cancer, still about one fourth of patients will presented at metastatic stage or developed recurrence after initial treatment and required further systemic therapy. Facing the wide range of available options for systemic therapy, the current challenge is how to select the most effective treatment. Unfortunately, there is no good biomarkers available to aid treatment selection. Currently, there are some approaches to try to test the response of kidney cancer to different chemotherapeutic agents. Previous studies showed that 3D organoid culture model can improve our ability to model tumor behavior. Organoid culture technology may provide opportunities for new drug development and drug screening. In this study, investigators aim to establish a reliable and effective method to cultivate kidney cancer cells, then will provide researchers for further information on personalized and targeted therapy on kidney cancer for local Hong Kong patients.
Researchers are doing this study to find out if the combination of the drugs axitinib and talazoparib is a safe and effective treatment for people with your previously treated advanced kidney cancer. Researchers will look for the highest dose of talazoparib that causes few or mild side effects when given in combination with a standard dose of axitinib.
This is a prospective, multi-center, post-market study to evaluate the clinical utility of IRIS, a 3D anatomical modeling software, with standard CT scans during pre-operative planning and intra-operative navigation for nephrectomy. The study will be conducted over the course of 21-24 months and enroll approximately 60-120 subjects.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the use of immunotherapy nivolumab and the targeted therapy cabozantinib prior to removal of the kidney, will increase the number subjects who are without any visible kidney cancer in their body at some point during the course of treatment.
This study evaluates the use of NanoDoce injected directly into tumors in the kidney of people with renal cell carcinoma.
In the last decade, investigators from the Department of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics (National Cancer Institute, USA) have conducted genome-wide association (GWAS) studies of renal cell carcinoma. Dr. Mark PURDUE and Dr. Stephen CAHNOCK (Department of Epidemiology of Cancer and Genetics, NCI) propose to expand their genome-wide association study (Expanded GWAS) by genotyping approximately 10,000 additional cases of kidney cancer patients, in collaboration with US institutions, South-American and European. This study describes the participation of the French Kidney Cancer Research Network (UroCCR) in the Expanded GWAS research, under the coordination of Professor BERNHARD (Bordeaux University Hospital).
This study was designed to assess the safety and efficacy of inactivated tumor cells genetically modified with the TAG-7 gene as immunotherapy for cancer. Patients with melanoma or kidney cancer were included since they have immune-dependent tumors. Treatment was done in the adjuvant setting after complete cytoreduction of locally advanced or metastatic disease or in the therapeutic setting in patients where complete cytoreduction was impossible.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of papaverine on renal artery blood flow after declamping of renal artery.