View clinical trials related to Metastatic Breast Cancer.
Filter by:Prospective multicenter observational study to assess molecular drivers of metastatic breast cancer and disease evolution upon therapeutic pressure. The main aim is to develop and validate prognostic, predictive and pathogenic markers in clinically well-characterized population-based material of breast cancer tumors and the corresponding normal tissue.These data will be used to characterize recurrent breast cancer on a molecular level, study tumor evolution, develop biomarkers of response/resistance to targeted therapy in the metastatic setting, enroll patients on targeted treatment clinical studies and to elucidate mechanisms of resistance to therapy.
Trastuzumab combined with chemotherapy has been approved as the first line therapy in HER2+ metastatic breast cancer. When patients experienced progression beyond trastuzumab containing therapy, T-DM1 is considered as the second line therapy followed by trastuzumab plus any other chemotherapeutic agents or lapatinib plus capecitabine. A biosimilar drug is a biological product that is highly similar to a licensed biological product, with no clinically meaningful differences in terms of safety, purity, or potency. Several trastuzumab biosimilar products have been approved after efficacy and safety studies which were usually as the first line setting with taxane combined. Even though trastuzumab biosimilar drugs demonstrated similarity of equivalence with trastuzumab in these studies, the efficacy of their second use beyond progression with other chemotherapeutic agents has not been tested yet. In addition, the investigators don't have any data regarding possible cross reactivity between trastuzumab and trastuzumab biosimilar drugs. In this study, the investigators plan multicenter phase II clinical trial to test the efficacy, safety and immunogenicity of trastuzumab biosimilar, Herzuma® in combination with TPC in patients with HER2+ metastatic breast cancer who progressed after 2 or more HER-2 directed chemotherapy.
In this phase I feasibility study, the investigators evaluate the combination of lyso-thermosensitive liposomal doxorubicin (LTLD, ThermoDox) with local hyperthermia and cyclophosphamide (C), for the local treatment of the primary breast tumour in patients with metastatic breast cancer. When heated to 40-43 degrees Celsius (ºC), LTLD releases a very high concentration of doxorubicin locally within seconds. Hyperthermia of the primary tumour will be induced by Magnetic Resonance guided High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (MR-HIFU) on a dedicated Sonalleve MR-HIFU breast system. The investigators hypothesize that by substituting doxorubicin (A) in the AC-chemotherapy regimen for the combination of LTLD and MR-HIFU induced hyperthermia, optimal local tumour control can be achieved without compromising systemic toxicity or efficacy. This will be the first study to evaluate LTLD with MR-HIFU hyperthermia in breast cancer patients.
This is a prospective two-stage single arm phase II study to be conducted in conformance with Good Clinical Practices. This study will enrol 53 patients, based on a two steps Simon's design. Patients will entry into the study if the following conditions will be satisfied: - BRCA1/2 germline mutations. - Metastatic disease with measurable lesions will be evaluated by computed tomography or by PET (Positron Emission Tomography) scan. - Patients must have received anthracycline and taxanes before entry into the study. Patients will be treated with Carboplatin AUC6 (Area Under The Curve) EV (endovenous) every 3 weeks in combination with Pembrolizumab 200 mg EV every 3 weeks for 6 cycles. Afterwards, the Pembrolizumab will recontinued with the same schedule until unacceptable toxicity or disease progression. The primary endpoint will be Objective Responses Rate (ORR) (complete answers + partial answers) evaluated according to the RECIST criteria.
The main purpose of this study is to examine the side effects that participants with metastatic breast cancer experience when taking abemaciclib with or without food.
Phase II Pilot Study of Trastuzumab Biosimilar (Herzuma®) plus Gedatolisib in Patients with HER-2 Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer Who Progressed after 2 or more HER-2 directed Chemotherapy
The main purpose of this research study is to learn whether the investigational combination of olaparib, palbociclib, and fulvestrant is safe in patients with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer and BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.
This is a prospective interventional phase I/II study which will be done at Tata Medical Centre, Kolkata. Total 30 eligible female patients, ≥18 years of age, with locally advance invasive carcinoma of breast, not amenable to curative surgery of metastatic breast cancer, planned for palliative loco regional radiotherapy will be enrolled in the study amongst which patients with left sided breast cancer (at least 10) will be recruited to study the feasibility of voluntary breath hold technique for heart sparing. Once consented, all patients will have regional baseline PET-CT scan of breast and tissue biopsy along with blood sampling done before studying radiotherapy. Planning Ct scan will then be taken, with standard planning CT scan for right breast cancers with implementation voluntary breath hold technique for the left breast disease. All patients will be treated with hypo-fractionated radiotherapy with schedule of 26Gy on 5 Fractions over 1 week with 6Gy simultaneously integrated boost with incorporation of breath hold technique for left breast disease. All patients will be assessed weekly during course of radiotherapy. The toxicity will be assessed using CTCAE version 4 and LENT SOMA toxicity criteria and the impact of the hypo-fractionated breast radiotherapy schedule on quality of life in advanced incurable breast cancer patients using FACT B scores PHQ4 questionnaire will also be assessed during treatment and follow-ups tissue bio0psy will be taken after 2 hours of completion of 1 st and last fraction of radiotherapy and biobanked for future radiobiological tests. Response evaluation will be done clinically and by regional PET CT scan using PERSIST criteria in 3 months after completion of radiotherapy. After completion of treatment, patient will initially be followed up every month for 1 st three months thereby 3 monthly for 2 years and 6 monthly for next 3 years.
This is a Phase II treatment study that is done to evaluate how effective and safe the combination of pembrolizumab and cisplatin work in treating participants with triple-negative breast cancer that had spread to other parts of the body, has come back, or cannot be removed by surgery. Pembrolizumab (investigational drug) is a monoclonal antibody that works by helping your immune system to fight cancer. Cisplatin is a chemotherapy drug that works by interfering with tumor cell division. Studies also suggest that treatment with chemotherapy, like cisplatin, may improve the effectiveness of pembrolizumab. This study will test the effectiveness of pembrolizumab and cisplatin in participants with advanced triple-negative breast cancer.
To evaluate the efficacy of eribulin for treatment of HER2-negative breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM)