View clinical trials related to Melanoma.
Filter by:This phase I trial investigates the impact of cefazolin before surgery on the microbiome in patients with stage I-II melanoma. Antibiotics, such as cefazolin, given at the time of surgery may cause a significant change in the microbes (like bacteria and viruses) found in the stomach and intestines. This trial may help researchers learn if any changes in microbes affect the body's ability to respond to surgery and cancer.
This study will evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics, and activity of belvarafenib as a single agent and in combination with either cobimetinib or cobimetinib plus nivolumab in patients with NRAS-mutant advanced melanoma who have received anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy.
This is a trial of prospective collection of serial blood samples after administration of COVID-19 vaccine in patients with cancer who are receiving active cancer treatment, planned to start therapy with 14 days of consent, or have had stem cell transplant. Cancer treatments and administration of vaccine are not controlled by the study.
ATLAS-IT-05 is an open-label, single-arm study in patients with advanced melanoma accessible for injections (cutaneous, subcutaneous, lymph node, or intramuscular tumors) and who have either exhausted treatment options or are not eligible for, suitable for, or willing to undergo such treatments.
This is a Phase 1/1b, multicenter, open-label, dose-escalation, and dose-expansion study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic (PK), pharmacodynamic (PD), and clinical activity of AB308 in combination with zimberelimab (AB122) in participants with advanced malignancies.
Approximately 40 participants with locally advanced or metastatic melanoma will be enrolled in 20 sites in the United States into 1 of the following 2 arms: Primary resistance to initial checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) therapy in Arm A and Acquired resistance to initial CPI therapy in Arm B. Participants who have disease progression (PD) after discontinuation of CPIs, especially in neoadjuvant or adjuvant therapy, will be considered to have acquired resistance in this study. Participants will receive study treatment (Selinexor and Pembrolizumab) until PD, intolerable toxicity or withdrawal from the study, whichever occurs first.
This is a prospective data collection study of patients with advanced solid tumors who will receive standard of care immunotherapy (IO) and will be monitored with SIGNATERA™ testing. SIGNATERA™ test will be performed at baseline and during routine care. The test results will be part of assessing tumor response. The correlation between SIGNATERA™ test results and subsequent treatment decisions will be examined to compare actual treatment delivered against treatment decisions potentially impacted by SIGNATERA™ results. Treatment administered, tumor assessment results, time to progression, overall survival, physician questionnaires, and patient-reported outcomes will be collected/recorded.
HX008 is a humanized monoclonal antibody targeting PD-1 on T cell surface, restores T cell activity, thus enhancing immune response and has potential to treat various types of tumors. In this study, the efficacy and safety of HX008 in patients with locally advanced or metastatic melanoma who have failed the standard treatments will be evaluated.
This is an open-label, multicenter, multi-dose escalation and dose expansion study in subjects with selected advanced solid tumors (Part A) and advanced metastatic pancreatic cancer (Parts C & D) to evaluate the safety and tolerability of CM-24 in combination with nivolumab. In Part C of the study gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel or Nal-IRI/5-FU/LV will be administered subsequent to CM24 and nivolumab. CM24, nivolumab and gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel or Nal-IRI/5-FU/LV are administered intravenously.
A complete family history (FH) may identify persons at high risk for certain conditions. They can be offered genetic testing and life-saving screening and treatment. In practice, complete FH is rarely collected or entered into the electronic medical record (EMR). The Family History Screening Questionnaire is a survey patients complete to tell whether they are at increased risk of specific cancers, heart disease or diabetes. We will test a new way to record FH that includes an app to improve use of FH by family physicians and patients. The strategy includes education for patients and physicians about the importance of FH; patient completion of the FH questionnaire prior to appointments; and prompts in the EMR. We expect this to help family physicians and patients interpret FH and make the best decisions. We will assess the proportion of patients with new EMR FH information. We will explore if the strategy increases appropriate referrals for screening and genetic consultation for those at increased FH risk. We will also obtain patients' and physicians' feedback on this strategy. This new approach may improve FH information exchange between patients and physicians, encourage shared decision-making and reduce cancer deaths and chronic disease burden.