View clinical trials related to Melanoma.
Filter by:This trial is a multicenter, single arm study of efficacy of vactosertib in combination with pembrolizumab in advanced acral or mucosal melanoma patients progressed prior treatment including immunotherapy or targeted therapy and chemotherapy. This trial will be conducted though Korean Cancer Study Group (KCSG). The KCSG is responsible for the project management of the trial. Patient recruitment will take at 4 institutions. Participants will be treated for up to 35 cycles (approximately 2 years) after initiation of treatment with intravenous 200mg of pembrolizumab every 3 weeks in combination with vactosertib. Vactosertib will be given orally for 200mg, bid for 5 days (from Mon. to Fri.) per week. This study will use ORR based on RECIST 1.1 and modified RECIST 1.1 (immune related RECIST) criteria as the primary endpoint and the tumor assessment will be done every 6 weeks. Secondary endpoints are DCR, PFS, OS, and safeties. Exploratory biomarkers predictive biomarker candidates (e.g., level of PD-L1 tumor expression, EMT marker, PD-L1, TGF-β RII, and pSMAD2) in tumor tissue and ctDNA in blood will be investigated in both pre-treatment and post-treatment periods.
This study will enroll metastatic (Stage IV or inoperable stage III) melanoma (MM) patients carrying a BRAF V600E/K mutation with confirmed primary resistance to standard of care immunotherapy (single agent PD-1 or a combination of CTLA-4/PD-1 blockade). Patients must be naïve to therapy with BRAF+MEK inhibitors, with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 or 1.
This is a first-in-human multi-center study which will be conducted in advanced malignant solid tumors patients. The solid tumor type is limited to melanoma, colorectal, non-small-cell lung, and thyroid cancer with positive BRAF V600 mutation. This study is divided into three stages: Phase Ia: a dose-escalation phase of XP-102; Phase Ib: a dose-escalation and sample size expansion phase of XP-102 plus trametinib; Phase IIa: an expansion phase of XP-102 plus trametinib.
This single center, single arm and prospective study aimed to establish gene mutation database and select the neoantigens in patients with advanced malignant melanoma, bladder cancer and colorectal cancer. Then, we intended to explore the safety and efficacy of individual tumor antigen-sensitized DC vaccine and their sensitized T cells in these solid cancers.
This was a single arm, open-label, single center, cohort study to determine the efficacy and safety of AMT-116 CAR-T cells in patients with moderate or far advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and squamous cell cancer of the head and neck (HNSCC),AMT-253 CAR-T cells in patients with moderate or far advanced melanoma.
A two-arm, randomised trial investigating the response of encorafenib and binimetinib compared to standard adjuvant therapy.
Skin melanoma is a common form of skin cancer. Its diagnosis is usually clinically suspected and then affirmed by histopathological examination. In some cases, the histopathological analysis of these lesions is equivocal, and the malignant or benign nature of the proliferation is difficult to determine with certainty. In these cases, the use of expensive ancillary tests, which are hardly accessible and take a long time to set up (FISH - CGH-array), is usually required. Anti-PRAME immunostaining, an inexpensive and readily available technic, has recently been described as highly sensitive and specific for diagnosing malignant melanocytic proliferations. Knowledge on its utility for evaluating ambiguous melanocytic neoplasms remains limited. Our study aims to improve the current body of knowledge on the utility of PRAME immunohistochemistry for evaluating challenging samples of melanocytic proliferation. The secondary objective is to determine the PRAME immunoreactivity profile for each histological subtype of melanocytic proliferations (spitzoid tumors, cellular blue nevi, dysplastic nevi ...)
Evaluate PFS of PD-1 Toripalimab Combined With Anlotinib in Subjects With unresectable locally advanced or metastatic acral malignant melanoma
The (overarching) iToBoS Project involves 18 research partners spanning the European Union (including UK and Israel), and 1 Australian partner. The overall aim is to develop an AI assisted diagnostic platform for the early detection of melanoma. The Clinical Data Acquisition Study (this study) will recruit 600 participants across 3 international sites (Brisbane, Italy, and Spain). The primary objective is to compare the quality and resolution of conventional dermoscopic images of skin lesions with the full-body images captured by the iToBoS imaging system. Secondary objectives are to collect imaging, clinical and genetic data across the three sites, to create labelled datasets for use in training the iToBoS AI component. Also, to refine and develop a holistic melanoma risk score method to be used for the iToBoS system. Lastly, to assess safety of the iToBoS system. At study site we will aim to recruit 200 participants stratified by risk (of melanoma) categories (low/normal, high, and ultra-high). Participants will be required to attend 3 study visits (months 0, 6 and 12), for total body imaging with the iToBoS system, and dermoscopic images of individual moles. Genetic research and clinical testing are an optional part of the study.
Malignant melanoma, is a kind of malignant tumor derived from melanocytes. It is common in skin, mucous membrane, eye choroid and other parts. Melanoma is one of the fastest growing malignant tumors with an annual incidence rate of 3-5%. In 2012, there were 232000 new cases of melanoma and 55000 deaths worldwide. Though, the incidence rate of melanoma is relatively low in China, it has been increasing rapidly in recent years. Melanoma has seriously endangering the health of Chinese people. Patients with stage Ⅳ melanoma have a poor prognosis. According to statistics, the median survival time of stage M1a melanoma is 15 months, while stage M1b is 8 months. The median survival time of bone metastasis melanoma is 6 months, while liver and brain metastasis is 4 months. The overall median survival time of metastatic melanoma is only 7.5 months, and the 2-year survival rate is 15%. For patients with advanced melanoma, dacarbazine is the only chemotherapy drug approved by NMPA, but its overall effective rate is only 13.4%, and the median survival time is 5.6 ~ 11 months. Therapies(new drugs or new combination treatments)with higher remission rate and longer survival are urgently needed for patients with advanced melanoma.