View clinical trials related to Malignant Melanoma.
Filter by:Melanoma incidence is increase in global population and number of transplantation also. However immunosuppressor increase recurrence risk of melanoma. There are more and more cases of eligible patients to transplant with an antecedent of melanoma. There is no guideline yet. Main objective is survival time without melanoma recurrence in this population to do guideline of time limit or not between melanoma and transplantation by stage.
Currently, there is no widely used adjuvant treatment available to improve survival after surgical excision of a primary melanoma. In a previous study, loco-regional and systemic immune stimulations, as well as favourable clinical outcomes in terms of sentinel lymph node (SLN) tumor status and recurrence-free survival (RFS) in patients with clinical stage I-II melanoma who received a low dose of toll-like receptor 9 (TLR-9) CPG7909 (CpG-B ODN) intradermally at the excision site of the primary tumor prior to SLN biopsy (SNB) were described. In this phase II trial the investigators had investigated the clinical activity of a next-generation CpG-ODN, IMO-2125, and it's ability to induce loco-regional and systemic immune stimulation in pT3-4 cN0M0 melanoma patients who are scheduled to undergo a combined re-excision and SNB is
This study aims to evaluate safety and effect of combining an oncolytic adenovirus (delolimogene mupadenorepvec; LOAd703) with atezolizumab in patients with melanoma. LOAd703 will be administered intratumorally for up to 12 injections while atezolizumab will be administered intravenously for the duration of the active study visits (up to 57 weeks). The patients are then monitored for survival for maximum study participation of 48 months. The treatments will be given every 3 weeks. The patients will then be monitored for toxicity, PK, ADA, immune responses, virus shedding, tumor response by RECIST 1.1 and survival.
The purpose of this study is to find out if a new treatment cancer vaccine called SCIB1 can be used safely when added to either nivolumab (Opdivo) with ipilimumab (Yervoy) or pembrolizumab (Keytruda), standard treatments approved for patients with advanced melanoma (skin cancer). The study will also look to see if SCIB1 can increase the likelihood that melanoma patients will respond to either nivolumab with ipilimumab or pembrolizumab, and also if SCIB1 can help to make those responses last longer. SCIB1 is considered experimental. SCIB1 has been given to melanoma patients in an earlier study. It was generally well-tolerated, and researchers saw some signs that it may help to stimulate the immune system, which is a way in which the body can fight the cancer.
This study evaluates the addition of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) to the combination of binimetinib + encorafenib + pembrolizumab in the treatment of BRAFⱽ⁶⁰⁰ mutation-positive melanoma with brain metastases (MBM).
Consecutive patients treated with PD-1 therapy in Qingdao City were included in our study. The effecy and safety of the four PD-1 agents according to clinical outcomes in real world will be studied.
This trial is a first-in-human drug combination with the first-in-class alkylating histone deacetylase inhibition (HDACi) fusion molecule Tinostamustine (EDO-S101) and the anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody Nivolumab in patients with refractory, locally advanced or metastatic melanoma.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of pembrolizumab (MK-3475) combined with lenvatinib (MK-7902/E7080) compared to pembrolizumab alone (with placebo for lenvatinib) as first-line treatment in adults with no prior systemic therapy for their advanced melanoma. The primary study hypotheses are that: 1) The combination of pembrolizumab and lenvatinib is superior to pembrolizumab and placebo as assessed by Progression-free Survival (PFS) per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1 (RECIST 1.1), and 2) The combination of pembrolizumab and lenvatinib is superior to pembrolizumab and placebo as assessed by Overall Survival (OS). For this study, RECIST 1.1 has been modified to follow a maximum of 10 target lesions and a maximum of 5 target lesions per organ.
This study is a phase II study of AZD6738 in combination with durvalumab in patients with solid tumor (cohort A (N=30): GC who have failed secondary chemotherapy treatments regimen; cohort B (B=30): melanoma patients who have failed to IO). Patients will receive AZD6738 plus durvalumab combination regimen. AZD6738 will be administered at 240 mg twice daily on days 1 to 7 in Cycle 0 (lead-in period) and therafter at 240 mg BD on days 22 to 28 in a 28-day cycle. Durvalumab will be administered at 1500 mg every 4 weeks from cycle 1 day 1. Tumour evaluation using modified RECIST 1.1 will be conducted at screening (within 28 days prior to first dose) and every 8 weeks relative to the date of first dose, up to week 40, then every 12 weeks until objective disease progression (within a window of +/- 7 days of the scheduled date). Patients will continue to receive treatment with AZD6738 and durvalumab provided that the treatment is tolerable and there is evidence of clinical benefit (as judged by the investigator) and secure supply of medication. Upon confirmation of objective disease progression, or treatment disconiutation criteria are met, both durvalumab and AZD6738 must be discontinued. Patients may continue with AZD6738/durvalumab beyond objective disease progression (determined by modified RECIST 1.1) at the discretion of the investigator if they are clinically benefiting from the treatment and they do not meet any other discontinuation criteria. If either durvalumab and/or AZD6738 are deemed intolerable (as judged by the investigator) so that discontinuation of either agent is deemed in the patient's best interest despite dose interruptions, dose modification and initiation of supportive treatments, both durvalumab and AZD6738 must be discontinued and the patient withdrawn from the study. Patients are not permitted to continue either AZD6738 or durvalumab as monotherapy. There is no maximum duration of treatment with AZD6738 and durvalumab. The imaging modalities used for modified RECIST 1.1 assessment will be CT or MRI scans of chest,abdomen and pelvis. modified RECIST 1.1 scans will be analysed by the investigator on site. Patients will also be requested to provide tumour samples from the primary or metastatic tumours pre-study and on progression. Sample provision is mandatory, subject to aspecific consent, and will aid understanding of resistance mechanisms. However, if biopsy site is not feasible, the protocol will allow waiving the rebiopsy procedure.
In this phase I first-in-humans-study a vaccine consisting of arginase-1 (ARG1) peptides and the adjuvant Montanide ISA-51 will be tested in ten patients with metastatic solid tumors. Patients will be treated with an ARG1 vaccine every third week for 45 weeks.