View clinical trials related to Metastatic Breast Cancer.
Filter by:CATCH is an indication-specific diagnostic platform, which drives the implementation of integrative, genomic profiling for metastatic breast cancer into the clinics. The main objective of this approach is to identify biomarkers and drug targets to guide targeted therapeutic interventions. Eligible are all metastatic breast cancer patients (independent of gender), irrespective of molecular subtype. At initial diagnosis of distant metastasis or progress at disease progression, biopsy samples from a prognostic-relevant metastasis are retrieved during standard-of-care procedures for central analyses, together with blood samples. In parallel to all standard-diagnostic measures, genomic and transcriptomic profiling is conducted to infer the underlying biology of the disease and identify patients who might profit from biomarker-guided interventions in clinical trials. Samples not required for standard-of-care clinical procedures or genomic profiling are systematically collected in a dedicated bio-repository to fuel translational scientific companion programs. The continuously growing comprehensive database serves as an integrative resource for systematic, prospective multidimensional data collection (clinical records, biomaterial, genomic data). In summary, the overarching goal is to generate a precision oncology platform to i) identify clinically-actionable biomarkers and drug targets that drive genomics-guided therapies and ii) couple the observational, diagnostic registry platform to an increasing number of independent, biomarker-stratified clinical therapy trials (CATCH-GUIDE).
The primary objectives of this study are to adapt and evaluate a sexual quality of life intervention in women with metastatic breast cancer and their partners.
Olaparib, a PARP inhibitor, is proven as an effective therapy for germline BRCA1/2-mutated breast cancer; however, the therapeutic efficacy for somatic mutation in BRCA1/2 or genes of homologous recombination DNA repair is unclear. Maintenance of Oalaprib can delay the disease progression in patients with BRCA1/2 mutated advanced ovarian cancer after treatment with platinum based chemotherapy. The investigators design a phase 2 study to evaluate the efficacy of maintenance of Olaparib in patients with metastatic breast cancer. The investigators enroll patients with metastatic ER(+)Her2(-) or triple-negative breast cancer. Patients who are chemotherapy-naïve or prior 1-line chemotherapy are eligible for screening. All eligible patients will receive 4 cycles of platinum based chemotherapy. Gene test will be performed on their breast tumor. If patients have mutation of HR genes and at least stable disease after platinum based chemotherapy, they will be randomized to treatment arm (Olaparib maintenance) or control arm (continuation of chemotherapy). The primary end-point is progression-free survival, and the secondary end-point is to assess the response rate, overall survival and quality of life.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of elacestrant over the course of 6 months in patients with ER+/HER2- advanced/metastatic breast cancer who received no prior CDK4/6i in the metastatic setting.
The aim of this study is to identify the optimal dose for EP0062 as monotherapy and to assess its Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, and Efficacy in Patients with Relapsed Locally Advanced or Metastatic AR+/HER2-/ER+ Breast Cancer
This is a multicenter, Phase 1b/2 trial. The phase 1b part of the trial aims to determine the RP2D of elacestrant when administered in combination with alpelisib, everolimus, palbociclib, abemaciclib, and ribociclib. The Phase 2 part of the trial will evaluate the efficacy and safety of the various combinations in patients with ER+/HER2- advanced/metastatic breast cancer.
Given the certain benefit in efficacy of adding CDK 4/6 inhibitor to first line endocrine therapy in metastatic breast cancer HR+ HER2- , the aim of this project is to evaluate whether patients without private health insurance may have worse outcomes than privately insured women due to limited access to such class of drugs during their treatments. Prospective observational study with 300 patients divided into two groups, one with patients from the public health system and the second with patients treated in the private service. Patients will be recruited in different regions of Brazil and will be followed for 24 months, stratified according to the use or not of the CDK 4/6 inhibitors.
ISIdE is an European, multicentric study that aims to assess the efficacy of Sacituzumab Govitecan (SG) in locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer where the disease has progressed despite chemotherapy or within 6 months after the end of curative treatments in order to: 1. evaluate the treatment efficacy in less pretreated patients. 2. identify biomarkers that could predict response or resistance to the drug. 100 patients will be included in this trial.
SV-101 is intended to overcome the complex and multifactorial nature of the mechanisms mediating tumor immune evasion, by the use of a combination of therapeutic agents that elicit multiple immuno-pharmacologic effects.
The purpose of this study is to see if using Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy/SBRT to treat a single metastatic site where cancer has worsened may be an effective treatment for people with oligometastatic breast cancer. Participants will stay on their usual drug therapy while they receive SBRT. This combination of SBRT to a single metastatic site and usual drug therapy may prevent participants' cancer from worsening in other metastatic sites or spreading.