View clinical trials related to Metastatic Solid Tumor.
Filter by:A first-in-human, Phase I, open-label, multicenter study of WTX-124 administered as monotherapy and in combination with pembrolizumab to patients with advanced solid tumors.
This study is an open-label, Phase 1, multicenter, continuous dose escalation study of XT-0528 in adult subjects with Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumor Malignancies. The study will consist of 4 periods: Screening Period (up to 28 days prior to Cycle 1 Day 1) Safety Run-in Period (Cycle 1; continuous dosing on Days 1-21 of 28-day cycle) Continuous Dosing Period (Cycle 2 and beyond; continuous dosing on Days 1-28 of 28-day cycle) Safety Follow-up Period (30 days post-last dose).
This is an investigator-initiated, single-center, open-label clinical trial designed to evaluate the safety and PK of the PET tracer [18F]AlF-RESCA-IL2 in patients prior to and during treatment.
The PraG treatment model has synergistic effects with RANKL inhibitor therapy, and the combination of the two treatments provides a survival benefit for patients with multiple bone metastatic solid tumors who have failed first-line systemic therapy. Phase I clinical trial is planned to determine the safety of PraG treatment mode combined with RANKL inhibitor desomumab and the optimal treatment sequence and mode. Further phase II clinical trial was conducted to confirm the efficacy of PraG treatment combined with desomumab. The mechanism of combination therapy was analyzed and biomolecular markers for potential efficacy prediction were screened by detection of lymphocyte subsets, cytokines and metabolomics in peripheral blood.
The traditional approach to cancer treatment has changes from using drugs approved for the specific cancer diagnosis to a tumor agnostic approach when treating solid tumors. How often will tumor biopsy and genomic profiling in patients with advanced solid tumors with no further evidence based treatment options result in biomarker-driven targeted treatment ? Feasibility of the investigation of patients and median turnaround time from biopsy to available genomic profile is evaluated.
Phase 1/2, dose escalation and expansion study designed to evaluate the safety and tolerability of NVL-655, determine the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D), and evaluate the antitumor activity in patients with advanced ALK- positive (ALK+) NSCLC and other solid tumors. Phase 1 will evaluate the overall safety and tolerability of NVL-655 and will determine the RP2D and, if applicable, the MTD of NVL-655 in patients with advanced ALK+ solid tumors. Phase 2 will determine the objective response rate (ORR) as assessed by Blinded Independent Central Review (BICR) of NVL-655 at the RP2D. Secondary objectives will include the duration of response (DOR), time to response (TTR), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and clinical benefit rate (CBR) of NVL-655 in patients with advanced ALK-positive NSCLC and other solid tumors.
This open-label, non-randomized study aims to determine the anti-inflammatory effect of colchicine on the reduction of peripheral blood CRP in patients with solid tumors or localized urothelial cancer. There are two cohorts, which will enroll separately and parallelly. Cohort 1 will include two successive groups with advanced/recurrent solid tumors (15 patients will receive low-dose colchicine and 15 for high-dose colchicine) who will receive 14 days of colchicine. In Cohort 2, 15 patients with post-radical surgery for high-risk clinically localized urothelial cancer will be enrolled. They will receive one 28-day cycle of colchicine. The primary outcome, post-treatment decline in CRP level, a continuous measure, will be defined as the maximum percentage decline from baseline in post-treatment CRP value within two weeks of colchicine (Cohort 1) or one cycle of colchicine (cohort 2), where the baseline value is measured before any treatment is initiated.
The purpose of this study is to determine the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D) of JBI-802 in patients with Advanced Solid Tumors.The efficacy of the RP2D will be evaluated in phase 2 in patients with solid tumors of neuroendocrine differentiation.
This study is researching an experimental drug called 89Zr-DFO-REGN5054 and cemiplimab. The study is focused on patients with a type of cancer that can be potentially imaged using 89Zr-DFO-REGN5054 and show special tumor features that may be important to the way the immune system fights cancer. The aim of the study is to study the safety and tolerability (how your body reacts to the drug) of the imaging agent 89Zr-DFO-REGN5054. The study is looking at several other research questions, including: - What side effects may happen from taking the study drugs - How much study drug is in your blood at different times - Whether the body makes antibodies against the study drugs (which could make the study drugs less effective or could lead to side effects)
The purpose of the research is to determine the highest dose of an oral compound called zeaxanthin that can be safely taken each day in patients with advanced cancer, the toxicity profile of zeaxanthin, and the dose of zeaxanthin to use in future cancer clinical trials.