View clinical trials related to Ovarian Cancer.
Filter by:This phase I/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of olaparib and entinostat and to see how well they work in treating patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancers that have come back or do not respond to platinum-based chemotherapy. Olaparib and entinostat may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.
This study is a multicenter, open-label, randomized clinical trial. Patients with ovarian cancer receiving postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy were eligible to enroll in this study. Eligible patients were randomly allocated in a "1:1" to "Standard group" ( 6mg PEG-rhG-CSF was administrated subcutaneously in 24h after chemotherapy) and "Adjusted group" (6mg PEG-rhG-CSF was administrated subcutaneously when ANC < 1000/mm3 after chemotherapy). All patients need to receive at least 2 cycles of PEG-rhG-CSF administration. The primary outcome is the incidence of grade 3/4 neutropenia, and the duration of grade 3/4 neutropenia, the second outcomes are the incidence of FN, neutropenia-related hospitalization, incidence of reduction and delay of chemotherapy dose and safety of PEG-rhG-CSF.
JAVELIN Ovarian PARP 100 (B9991030) is an open-label, randomized study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of avelumab in combination with chemotherapy followed by maintenance therapy of avelumab in combination with talazoparib versus an active comparator in treatment-naïve patients with locally advanced or metastatic ovarian cancer (Stage III or Stage IV). On March 19, 2019, Sponsors alliance announced the discontinuation of the ongoing Phase III study, and the decision was based on several factors, including previous announced interim results from JAVELIN Ovarian 100 study (B9991010). Patients who remain in B9991030 study will continue receiving their randomized treatment assigned and will be monitored for appropriate safety assessments until treatment discontinuation.
Many individuals with ovarian cancer experience distress, fatigue, weakness, anxiety, and other symptoms that decrease quality of life. Moderate exercise may improve quality of life, decrease distress, and improve biomarkers associated with prognosis in individuals with ovarian cancer. This clinical trial studies how well moderate exercise works in improving distress, quality of life, and biomarkers of angiogenesis and chronic stress in individuals with ovarian, fallopian tube, and primary peritoneal cancer.
To evaluate the safety of secondary chemotherapy induced thrombocytopenia (reduction in platelets which leads to bleeding) prophylaxis with romiplostim in ovarian cancer subjects receiving myelosuppressive (blood cell damaging) chemotherapy.It is anticipated that Romiplostim, when administered at an effective dose and schedule, will be a well-tolerated treatment for subjects experiencing chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia.
This study evaluates ADCT-301 in patients with Selected Advanced Solid Tumors. Patients will participate in a Treatment Period with 3-week cycles and a Follow-up Period every 12 weeks for up to 1 year after treatment discontinuation.
For patients with "Platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer" after second-line chemotherapy failure Using apatinib as a single drug Clinical efficacy observation Single study no control
Phase I study to establish safety and feasibility of intraperitoneally administered lentiviral transduced MOv19-BBz CAR T cells with or without cyclophosphamide + fludarabine as lymphodepleting chemotherapy
The purpose of this study was to assess the safety, tolerability, and preliminary anti-tumor activity of experimental medication NZV930 alone and when combined with PDR001 and/or NIR178, in patients with advanced cancers
ALM201/0001 is a Phase I, open-label, dose-escalation study of the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics (PK) of ALM201. Part 1 will be a dose-escalation study. Patients with advanced solid tumours will receive daily doses of ALM201 on Days 1-5, 8-12 and 15-19 in 21 day cycles. Part 2 will be a dose-expansion of the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) determined in Part 1. Patients with advanced ovarian cancer will be enrolled with the main objective to determine the recommended Phase II dose.