View clinical trials related to Melanoma.
Filter by:Although immunotherapy revolutionized melanoma outcomes over the last 10 years, only 40-50% of patients respond to treatments and 25% develop acquired resistances. Natural Killer (NK) cells naturally recognize and kill tumor cells. However, the immunosuppressive micro-environment generated by the tumor decreases NK cells' killing activity. CD160 is a NK cell receptor identified and characterized in our laboratory. Engagement of the GPI isoform (CD160-GPI) initiates NK cell cytotoxic response. Upon NK cell activation, a transmembrane isoform (CD160-TM) is neo-synthesized which promotes the amplification of activated NK cell cytotoxicity. The aim of this study is to assess the phenotypic profile of advanced stages melanoma patients' NK cells (mainly CD160-TM expression or its induction) and therefore the therapeutic potential of the use of an anti-CD160-TM agonist antibody to boost the NK-dependent mechanism leading to tumor depletion.
It is a single-center,exploratory clinical trial aimed to evaluate the objective response rate (ORR) of Camrelizumab combined with apatinib and Temozolomide as First Line Therapy in Advanced Acral Melanoma.
This is an open-lable, single-arm, single-dose escalation and multiple-dose expansion clinical study of cell therapy to observe and evaluate the tolerance, pharmacokinetic characteristics, safety and efficacy of ScTIL210(Super circulating tumor infiltrating lymphocytes)in the treatment of Melanoma.
Comparison of the concordance of albumin nanocolloid and Lymphoseek® in the detection of lymph nodes of primary and secondary stage drainage by performing two lymphogammagrams
This is a run-in, randomized, non-comparative, phase II study designed according to a two stages optimal design by Simon. This phase II design will be preceded by a safety evaluation after the first cohort of 6 patients to preserve a high-grade of overlapping and/or unexpected toxicity rate. The study will assess the immune-objective response rate (iORR) (assessed using iRECIST criteria) of nivolumab combined with ipilimumab and guadecitabine or nivolumab combined with ipilimumab, in Melanoma and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients resistant to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy. Immune biologic correlates to treatment will be assessed as exploratory endpoints.
This study was a prospective, single-arm, multi-channel, multicenter, non-interventional real-world study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Toripalimab injection in the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma with previously systemic failure . The study population currently included only in the melanoma cohort-unresectable or metastatic melanoma patients who had previously failed systemic therapy. If new indications are approved during the implementation of the project, patients with new indications using Toripalimab injection will also be included in this study as a new cohort.This study uses offline (physical hospital) and online (DTP pharmacy and Lingke (Yinchuan) Internet hospital) to collect data and information, relying on Lingke technology (Beijing) Co., Ltd. EDC (Medical Research Cloud) database for data collection and processing. The classification of adverse events was based on the general toxicity evaluation standard NCI CTCAE 5.0 of the National Institute of Oncology (Chinese version).
The purpose of this clinical study is to evaluate the clinical utility of the Nevisense in normal clinical practice, i.e. the potential effect of implementing Nevisense in clinical decision making (Human vs Human & Machine) based on Nevisense measurement at time of biopsy decision.
This research study involves studying a device as a possible treatment for metastatic melanoma in the brain. The purpose of this study is to obtain information on the safety and effectiveness of the study device, NovoTTF-200A, in melanoma participants with brain metastases when it is combined with Pembrolizumab. The name of the study device involved in this study is: -- NovoTTF-200A The name of the drug used in this study is: -- Pembrolizumab
The purpose of this arm of the study is to evaluate the safety of PV-001-DC (autologous monocyte-derived dendritic cells pulsed with tumor lysate) when given in combination with PV-001-DV (Dengue Virus-1 strain #45AZ5) at the dose levels that were identified in the prior 2 arms and to determine if the combination can treat advanced melanoma. Patients will have a prescribed amount of PV-001-DV injected into one of their melanoma tumors. Patients will go to the clinic and have a needle placed in a vein. The PV-001-DC product will be infused into the patient's vein. Approximately every 3 weeks, for a total of 4 treatments, patients will receive additional infusions of PV-001-DC Patients will be at the clinic for at least 1 hour following the end of each PV-001-DC infusion and if they feel fine, they may go home. Approximately 49 days after the first infusion, patients will have a scan to see if their tumors have changed in size. Other scans may be performed during the study at different times. Patients will also have their blood and small samples of tumors tested for changes to the immune system. After 365 days, the trial will be completed for that patient.
The purpose of this arm of the study is to find the best way to give patients this investigational product and determine if it can treat advanced melanoma by stimulating the immune system. PV-001-DV is an attenuated (weakened) strain of dengue virus developed as a potential preventative vaccine for dengue fever by the US Army as Dengue Virus-1 #45AZ5. This is the first time PV-001-DV will be given to patients with melanoma. Up to 4 dose levels of PV-001-DV will tested in this arm. PV-001-DV (at the lowest dose) will be given to a group of 3 people. As each dose level is found to be safe, it will be given to another other 3 people at the next higher dose level, for a total of up to 10 people in this study. Investigators will monitor patients carefully for any harmful side effects. The side effects in people cannot be completely known ahead of time. Patients must be progressing after having completed prior therapy with a PD-1 / PD-L1 antagonist alone or in combination with anti-CTLA-4. If the patient is positive for BRAF, the patient must have progressed on at least one BRAF inhibitor in addition to a PD-1 / PD-L1 inhibitor alone or in combination with CTLA-4 for metastatic melanoma. Patients will have a prescribed amount of PV-001-DV injected into one of their melanoma tumors. Scans will be performed during the study at different times to see if their tumors have changed in size. Patients will also have their blood and small samples of tumors tested for changes to the immune system. After 365 days, the trial will be completed for that patient.