View clinical trials related to Solid Malignancy.
Filter by:This study will evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of CRISPR CAR T cellular therapies
Prospective interventional randomized controlled trial to assess safety and efficacy of romiplostim in chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia in children and adolescents with solid malignancy
This is a first in-human, open-label pilot (microdose) study of the positron-emitting agent 124I-PU-AD in subjects with specific cancer types (solid malignancy, lymphoma, and/or myeloma) and/or Alzheimer's disease.
Multicenter, international, prospective, observational study, designed to evaluate the postoperative results in terms of quality of life and functional recovery of elderly patients after major cancer surgery. The global expected duration of the study is 3 years, during which cancer patients over 70 years old undergoing major surgery will be evaluated before and after the surgical intervention, at 30 days, 3- and 6-months follow-up. The study is non-for-profit. Given the observational nature of the study, the original treatment plan, as designed by each individual recruiting centre, will not be altered or affected by the study inclusion. Inclusion in the study does not imply any deviation from the current standard of practice, and no change is expected to the perioperative treatment at any point. Patients will be only asked to complete simple screening/assessment tests.
The purpose of this study is to help develop a special PET/CT scan to help the investigator to develop a new drug and see where this drug goes in the body and how long it stays in diseased and normal tissue. The drug is called PU-AD. In this study, the investigators will give a tiny dose of PU-AD, a dose which they expect to be much too small to affect the disease. This tiny dose will be labeled with (attached to) a very small amount of radiation (called Iodine-124 or 124I) so that the investigators can follow where it goes in the body by using a PET/CT scanner. Doing this will help the investigators figure out how to best give higher doses of PU-AD to other patients in the future, and will help the investigators see if this tiny dose of PU-AD with radiation (124I-PU-AD) might be used in the future to detect disease using a PET/CT scanner.
The purpose of this research study is to look at participants with solid tumor malignancies and specific mutations respond to treatment with everolimus.
This is a Phase I study. This study is the first time that a new experimental drug called 18FFluoroglutamine, or F-Glutamine, is being used in people. F-Glutamine is a drug designed to be used with PET scanners that can 'see' where F-Glutamine goes in the body, after its injected. PET scanners are one of the kinds of scanners you normally find in a hospital radiology department. The researchers have found that tumors in animals absorb F-Glutamine. The researchers believe that scans with F-Glutamine might be able to find tumors in patients. This first in-human study is being done to see how long F-Glutamine lasts in the blood, when it is given to people in tiny amounts by an injection, and to see where F-Glutamine goes in the body. If the results of this trial are good, then the study doctors plan to use F-Glutamine in another trial to see if scans with F-Glutamine are better for finding tumors compared to the standard types of scans that doctors use.