View clinical trials related to Neoplasms.
Filter by:The primary goal of this study is to estimate the effectiveness of a medical decision support system based on artificial intelligence in the endoscopic diagnosis of benign tumors. Researchers will compare Adenoma detection rate between "artificial intelligence - assisted colonoscopy" and "conventional colonoscopy" groups to evaluate the clinical effectiveness of artificial intelligence model.
This is a phase Ib/II, open, dose-escalation and expansion study of an anti-PD1/TIM3 bispecific antibody,LB1410 in combination with an anti-Claudin18.2/IL-10 fusion protein, LB4330 in patients with advanced or metastatic solid tumors.
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the safety, toxicity, and antitumor activity of fourth ventricular infusions of nivolumab plus 5-azacytidine for recurrent ependymoma and nivolumab plus methotrexate for recurrent medulloblastoma and other CNS malignancies. Additionally, the study will explore immunologic responses to nivolumab. The hypothesis is that local administration of nivolumab, an immune checkpoint inhibitor, is safe and will lead to even more robust treatment responses when administered following 5-azacytidine in patients with recurrent ependymoma or methotrexate in patients with medulloblastoma or other CNS tumors.
The long-term goal of this research project is to demonstrate whether HRD negative (HPR) patients benefit when additional multimodal biological tumor information is incorporated into the molecular tumor board (mTB) treatment recommendation process.
This clinical trial is studying advanced solid tumors. Solid tumors are cancers that start in a part of your body like your lungs or liver instead of your blood. Once tumors have grown bigger in one place but haven't spread, they're called locally advanced. If your cancer has spread to other parts of your body, it's called metastatic. When a cancer has gotten so big it can't easily be removed or has spread to other parts of the body, it is called unresectable. These types of cancer are harder to treat. Patients in this study must have cancer that has come back or did not get better with treatment. Patients must have a solid tumor cancer that can't be treated with standard of care drugs. This clinical trial uses an experimental drug called SGN-MesoC2. SGN-MesoC2 is a type of antibody-drug conjugate (ADC). ADCs are designed to stick to cancer cells and kill them. They may also stick to some normal cells. This study will have 3 parts. Part A and Part B of the study will find out how much SGN-MesoC2 should be given to participants. Part C will use the information from Parts A and B to see if SGN-MesoC2 is safe and if it works to treat solid tumor cancers.
This is a prospective cohort study to explore the differences of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) between elderly gastrointestinal neoplasms patients with postoperative delirium (POD) who either develop or do not develop long-term postoperative neurocognitive disorders (pNCD).
This extension study is designed to enroll participants with hematologic malignancies who are receiving clinical benefit from tafasitamab treatment in a parent study with tafasitamab..
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the investigational drug AMXT 1501 (a pill taken by mouth) in combination with the drug difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) for infusion administered intravenously (IV; a liquid that continuously goes into your body through a tube that has been placed during a surgery into one of your veins). An investigational drug is one that has not been approved by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA), or any other regulatory authorities around the world for use alone or in combination with any drug, for the condition or illness it is being used to treat. The goals of this part of the study are: - Establish a recommended dose of AMXT 1501 in combination with DFMO for infusion - Test the safety and tolerability of AMXT 1501 in combination with DFMO for infusion in patients with cancer - To determine the activity of study treatments chosen based on: - How each subject responds to the study treatment - How long a subject lives without their disease returning/progressing
The purpose of this study is to find out whether the study drug, LY4052031, is safe, tolerable and effective in participants with advanced, or metastatic solid tumors including urothelial cancer. The study is conducted in two parts - phase Ia (dose-escalation, dose-optimization) and phase Ib (dose-expansion). The study will last up to approximately 4 years.
The purpose of this study is to learn about the effects of a new study drug, called SGR-3515 that may be a treatment for advanced solid tumors.