View clinical trials related to Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is a multicenter, open-label, single-arm Phase 1B/2 study to assess the safety and efficacy of tabelecleucel in combination with pembrolizumab for the treatment of subjects with platinum-pretreated, recurrent/metastatic Epstein-Barr Virus-associated Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (EBV+ NPC).
VK-2019-001 is a 1/2a trial of the oral EBNA-1 targeting agent VK-2019 in patients with EBV-positive recurrent or metastatic NPC to determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) and Recommended Phase 2 Dose (RP2D), as well as to evaluate the PK profile of VK-2019.
The principal objective is to compare the use of mometasone nasal spray to budesonide irrigations in patients suffering from CRSwNP who have never been operated.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability, and determine the maximum tolerated dose of INCB062079 in subjects with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma and other malignancies.
This randomized phase I trial studies how well olfactory training works in improving sense of smell after radiation therapy in patients with paranasal sinus or nasopharyngeal cancer. Olfactory training may improve smell function after radiation therapy in patients with paranasal sinus or nasopharyngeal cancer.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether avelumab, an investigational antibody against programmed death-ligand (PD-L1), has an effect on recurrent nasopharyngeal cancer. Avelumab is designed to block the interaction between programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1), a known immune checkpoint, and PD-L1. By blocking this interaction, the immune system may be stimulated, allowing it to more effectively recognize and attack the cancer.
This study will enroll patients with non-metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) that have residual Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA after curative radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy. The purpose is to evaluate the survival in these patients treated with apatinib (YN968D1), an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (phase IIa) and to compare the survival in these patients treated with apatinib versus placebo (phase IIb).
This is a lead-in dose escalation study to determine the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, maximum tolerated dose (MTD), and recommended Phase II dose of OPB-51602 administered on a weekly basis in subjects with advanced malignancies. Using the recommended phase II dose, the efficacy and tolerability of OPB-51602 administered prior to definitive chemoradiotherapy will be evaluated in locally advanced NPC patients. This study's overarching goal is the development of STAT3 inhibitors as a novel class of anti-cancer agents and the optimization of patient selection for STAT3 inhibitor therapy through parallel biomarker studies. This study hopes to establish a therapeutic window for OPB-51602 in solid tumours and will evaluate its potential as a targeted therapy of NPC, since this represents a critical unmet clinical need. The development of predictive and pharmacodynamic biomarkers in tandem with the clinical evaluation of OPB-51602 will be crucial to its therapeutic advancement and will enable an understanding of the genetic contexts of responsiveness and resistance to OPB-51602, which can in turn lead to the development of effective drug combinations to overcome resistance.The study hypothesizes that OPB-51602, a first-in-class STAT3 inhibitor, is efficacious in solid tumours with constitutively activated STAT3, such as NPC.
By this clinical trial, the investigators are trying to give an answer to such a question. Whether NPC patients staged N2-3M0 need adjuvant chemotherapy consisting of paclitaxel and platinum after concurrent chemoradiation?
This randomized phase II trial is studying how well selenomethionine (SLM) works in reducing mucositis in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer who are receiving cisplatin and radiation therapy. SLM may help prevent or reduce mucositis, or mouth sores, in patients receiving chemotherapy and radiation therapy. It is not yet known whether SLM is more effective than a placebo in reducing mucositis