View clinical trials related to Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma.
Filter by:The purpose of this retrospective observational study was to analyze the effect of targeted therapies administered as second-line treatment after failure of pazopanib as well as increase the amount of information available on efficacy and safety of pazopanib as a first-line therapy in practice usual for the clinical treatment of metastatic Renal Carcinoma.
This study to evaluate treatment in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) which has progressed through 2 to 3 prior lines of therapy, with the investigational drug CRLX101 in combination with bevacizumab compared to treatment with a standard of care therapy. The study will compare which treatment resulted in longer time before progression of the RCC. Patients will be treated and followed for progression of their disease on average for up to 6 months.
-Purpose: Phase I: To test the methods, data collection and analysis in a study to evaluate cognitive/affective/sleep symptoms in one patient undergoing treatment with high-dose Interleukin-2 (IL-2) for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC), their informal caregiver and their primary nurse. Phase II: A pilot study examining up to 10 IL-2 cases to describe cognitive/affective/sleep symptoms of patients receiving high-dose IL-2 therapy for metastatic melanoma (MM) or metastatic RCC in order to develop interventional studies to minimize these symptoms. -Aims: In this pilot, a case is comprised of the metastatic RCC patient receiving IL-2, their care partner, and their primary nurse. The care partner for this study will be the family member or friend staying with the IL-2 patient throughout treatment. Phase I (Evaluation of Methods and Procedures): One case will be examined to evaluate the methods, data collection and analysis to be used in this study. The aims of Phase I of this study are to: Aim 1) Evaluate recruitment and enrollment procedures to enroll one IL-2 case, comprised of the IL-2 patient, their care partner and their primary nurse; Aim 2) Evaluate administration procedures, data collected, and analysis of four questionnaire scales to detect the trajectory of cognition [Attentional Function Index and Montreal Cognitive Assessment] and affect [Hamilton Anxiety scale and Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology‒Clinician] in the IL-2 patient from the start to the end of a cycle of treatment; Aim 3) Evaluate procedures, data collected and analysis of journal entries from the care partner who are to record their thoughts, observations, and feelings concerning any changes in the patient's behavior or cognition during IL-2 treatment every 8 hours; Aim 4) Evaluate procedures, data collected and analysis of semi-structured questionnaires completed by the primary nurse taking care of the patient receiving IL-2 which will describe any changes in behavior or cognition in the patient during their IL-2 treatment; and Aim 5) Evaluate procedures, data collected and analysis of data of interviews with the IL-2 patient to further discern what symptoms endorsed on the measurement scales represent and how they are characterized, and interviewing the primary nurse to gain any additional data on cognitive/affective symptoms observed in the IL-2 patient. Phase II (Investigating Cognitive, Affective and Sleep Alterations in Patients Receiving high dose IL-2 therapy): Up to 10 additional cases will be enrolled to understand cognitive, affective and sleep symptoms induced from IL-2 therapy in oncology patients with MM or metastatic RCC, and help design future studies to ameliorate these treatment-limiting symptoms. The specific aims of this study are to: Aim 1) Describe cognitive (language, concentration, mental fatigue, confusion, attention, short-term memory, and orientation), affective (depression, anxiety, mood alterations), and sleep disturbance symptoms in patients receiving 1 to 4 cycles (up to 8-weeks) of high-dose IL-2 therapy. Aim 2) Examine observed patient experiences of cognitive/affective/sleep symptoms from each patient's primary care partner, and primary nurse during 1 to 4 cycles of IL-2 therapy. Aim 3) Describe the trajectories of cognitive/affective/sleep symptoms in patients with MM or metastatic RCC undergoing 1 to 4 cycles of IL-2 therapy. Not all patients will receive 4 cycles of IL-2, because treatment will depend on a) disease progression and b) side effect toxicity; therefore, the symptom trajectory will be described for the cycles completed in situations where all cycles are not completed.
An estimated 10,000 metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients receive first-line therapy in the Russian Federation. Bevacizumab (Avastin) in combination with interferon-alpha (IFN) is a recommended first-line treatment for metastatic RCC according to clinical recommendations of Russian Ministry of Health from 15.07.2010. Two randomized phase III trials (AVOREN, CALGB) showed that 50% of patients will progress on bevacizumab plus IFN within 8.5 - 10.2 months and will need sequential therapy. Everolimus (Afinitor) is a single agent which was evaluated and demonstrated efficacy in randomized phase III study (RECORD-1) in metastatic RCC patients after failure of targeted therapy. However, in this trial everolimus was compared with placebo for the treatment of patients whose disease had progressed on treatment with sunitinib or sorafenib (n=227). Only 9% (n=24) of patients received bevacizumab. Thus, efficacy data of everolimus in patients with disease progression on first-line bevacizumab is limited. Evaluating the effectiveness of everolimus in metastatic RCC patients with failure on bevacizumab with/without interferon alpha has a scientific and practical sense, and it is important for Russian Federation.
In this Phase 1 Trial investigators plan to establish the MTD of HyperAcute®-Renal (HAR) immunotherapy in subjects with clinically metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
This is a retrospective, non-interventional study which looks at the cohort of Renal Cell Carcinoma patients in a real life clinical setting and analyses into factors why these patients have been surviving for as long as 3-5 years unlike Clinical study where the survival is around 2 years. The factors which will be analysed include patient characteristics, dosage and adverse event management and tries to correlate these factors with survival.
Retrospective and prospective study in mRCC patients treated with sutent in first line and rechallenged by Sutent in 3rd and 4th line.
Sequential therapy with BEvacizumab, RAd001 (everolimus) and Tyrosinekinase inhibitors (TKI) in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC)
Phase 2, multi-center, open-label, single-treatment group, baseline-controlled study to identify subjects with Folate Receptor-Positive Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma
The folate receptor (FR) is overexpressed by many different cancer types, including renal cell carcinoma. Besides helping in the diagnosis of cancer, a folate-targeted imaging agent could provide an effective method to identify folate receptor-positive (FR+) cancer patients that may benefit from folate-targeted therapy. Up to 40 subjects, with known or strongly suspected metastatic renal cell carcinoma with at least one target lesion detected by a diagnostic imaging procedure (e.g. ultrasonography, CT, or MRI), will be enrolled in this study.