View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is a cohort-based, open-label dose escalation and expansion study in adults with advanced solid tumors or lymphoma, refractory or resistant to standard therapy, or without available standard or curative therapy.
A Phase 2, open-label, single-arm trial to evaluate the response of rucaparib in participants with various solid tumors and with deleterious mutations in Homologous Recombination Repair (HRR) genes.
This study uses an unconventional radiotherapy schedule developed at our institute, consisting of a short course high-dose partial irradiation targeting exclusively the hypoxic segment of a bulky tumors, which in our preliminary study has shown to be capable of inducing abscopal and bystander effects. This approach is delivered by using a stereotactic radiotherapy technique so as to spare nearby organs at risk including the peritumoral immune microenvironment from irradiation as much as possible. Our approach consists of a single or up to 3 radiotherapy doses of at least 10 Gy per fraction prescribed to the 70% isodose line encompassing the hypoxic target volume. Radiotherapy will be administered at the precise timing determined specifically for each patient based on the serially mapped homeostatic immune fluctuations by monitoring the blood levels of the cytokines and inflammatory markers over the 2 weeks prior to irradiation. This is done in order to synchronize the radiation treatment with the favorable, most active anti-tumor immune system phase, so as to stimulate and increase anti-tumor immune system activity. This is a monocentric, prospective, two-arm, phase I proof of principle study in which the investigator will enroll subjects with oligometastatic and/or locally advanced (N+) cancers with at least one "bulky" lesion (maximum diameter of at least 6 cm or greater). Patients with life expectancy of at least 3 months, who are ineligible for systemic therapy or experience disease progression with systemic therapies will be included. Radiotherapy will be administered to arm 1 at an estimated "less favorable time-position in immune cycle", while the second arm will have it administered at the estimated "most favorable time-position in immune cycle". The primary endpoint will be the response rate of the non-targeted effects both bystander (local, at the level of the partially treated bulky tumor) and abscopal (distant, at the non-treated metastatic sites), defined as a tumor regression of at least 30%. Secondary endpoints will be safety, survival and analysis of the best timing for the administration of radiotherapy.
This is a phase I, open-label, multiple-dose, dose-escalation study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and anti-tumor activity of CS3002 in subjects with advanced solid tumors.
A phase 1/2, first-in-human, open-label study to determine the safety, tolerability, PK, and preliminary efficacy of the novel RET/SRC inhibitor TPX-0046 in adult subjects with advanced or metastatic solid tumors harboring RET mutations or alterations. The study consists of three portions: 1) Phase 1 Dose Escalation and Food Effect Sub-study, and 2) Phase 1 dose expansion and 3) Phase 2 efficacy evaluation.
This study was planned to evaluate the safety and tolerability of RO7296682 in participants with advanced solid tumors.
This study is an open-label, Phase 1 study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, and pharmacodynamic profiles of AGEN1223 as a single-agent and in combination with balstilimab, as well as to assess the maximum tolerated dose and determine the RP2D of AGEN1223 as a single-agent and in combination with balstilimab in subjects with advanced solid tumors.
This is a FIH, open-label, Phase I dose-escalation study of ADG116 in subjects with advanced/metastatic solid tumors. Study drug, ADG116, is an anti -CTLA-4 fully human monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to human CTLA-4. ADG 116 administered intravenously (IV) over a period of 60-90 minutes. The study planned to treated 42 patients.
The goal of the current pragmatic trial is to evaluate the impact of a simple method of selecting a treatment approach for identified mutations on participants' progression free survival (PFS). The study also intends to collect information on barriers that investigators encounter when prescribing treatment options using the Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) reports. Additionally, patients' quality of life will be measured before, after, and during treatment. Patients will be followed until death for monitoring survival study endpoints.
A phase 1/2 study to assess the safety and efficacy of MB-102 in patients with relapsed or refractory BPDCN