View clinical trials related to Solid Tumor, Adult.
Filter by:This is an open-label, phase 1b/2, multicenter study designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, tolerability, PK, and pharmacodynamics of etigilimab in combination with nivolumab in subjects with locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors. Subjects will be assigned to receive etigilimab (every 2 weeks) in combination with nivolumab (240 mg every 2 weeks).
This randomized control trial will investigate the ability of an effective stress management psychoeducation program for employed caregivers to mitigate psychological distress and pathophysiology in spousal or partnered caregivers of patients' diagnosis with a solid tumor cancer of any stage. It is expected that improving caregiver status will have reduced depressive symptoms.
The purpose of this research is to examine if an experimental drug combination impacts the survival rate of individuals with Leptomeningeal Metastases This research study involves an experimental drug combination. The names of the study drugs involved in this study are: - Pembrolizumab - Lenvatinib
The Phase 1 part (Part A) is a dose escalation study of IV visugromab (CTL-002, a monoclonal antibody neutralizing GDF-15) as monotherapy and in combination with an approved checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) in patients with advanced solid tumors. Enrolment into the Ph 1 part is completed. The Phase 2 parts (Part B) are cohort expansions with visugromab (CTL-002) in combination with a defined CPI at a fixed dose into seven different solid tumor indications.
The investigational product (IP) HL-085 is an adenosine triphosphate-noncompetitive mitogen activated protein kinase (MEK) inhibitor with a strong selective anti-tumor activity, with a much lower dose than selumetinib. It has been shown strong anti-tumor activities in preclinical studies to treat solid tumors, e.g., melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, colon cancer and other malignancies with RAF and RAS mutations. Kechow has completed phase I dose escalation study to test HL-085 in patients with advanced NRAS mutated melanoma in China. The tested doses were 0.5 mg, 1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, 6mg, 9mg, 12mg, 15mg and 18mg BID oral administration and there was no dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) identified. All patients tolerated the study drug reasonably well. This study is a Phase I, open-label, dose escalation study to evaluate tolerability, safety, pharmacokinetic (PK) and preliminary antitumor activities of HL-085 in US patients with advanced solid tumors. The objective of the dose escalation is to evaluate safety and tolerability of selected TID and BID dose regimens in US patient population with advanced solid tumor and establish the Recommended Phase 2 Dose (RP2D). The starting dose for this trial is 12 mg daily oral administration. Three selected daily doses - 12 mg (4mg TID, 6mg BID), 18 mg (6mg TID, 9 mg BID), and 24 mg (8 mg TID, 12 mg BID) will be tested in this study to assess safety and tolerability of HL-085 at the 3 selected dose levels in US patient population with advanced solid tumors.
AdAPT-001 is an oncolytic virus that is injected directly into the tumor or via intraarterial administration. The purpose of this study is to find out if AdAPT-001 is safe and tolerable. The next step is to find out if AdAPT-001 if efficacious with or without a checkpoint inhibitor.
All current forms of therapy for tumor patients are essentially based on clinical, genomic or histopathological criteria for the choice of therapy. However, the change in the tissue during therapy is of particular importance for patients, both with regard to the development of resistance and the side effect profile. This applies in particular to immunotherapies and their use in advanced tumor diseases. Preliminary work on the fully human tumor explant model has shown that the use of human donor tissue in the context of a special bioreactor makes it possible to improve the possibilities of predicting and better understanding the mechanism of action of a therapeutic agent. Since there is a considerable need for personalized and thus improved therapy management in the field of oncology, the aim of this study is on the one hand to improve the decisive tissue parameters for the cultivation of human donated material and on the other hand to understand the basic reaction patterns of the tissue to therapies.
This is an open-label, dose escalation and expansion study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, and biological activity of VT3989 administered once daily in 3- or 4-week cycles in patients with mesothelioma and/or metastatic solid tumors that are resistant or refractory to standard therapy or for which no effective standard therapy is available.
This is a Phase 1/2, open-label, multicenter, non-randomized study to investigate the safety, tolerability, and clinical activity of HER2-specific dual-switch CAR-T cells, BPX-603, administered with rimiducid to subjects with previously treated, locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors which are HER2 amplified/overexpressed.
Single center, single arm pilot trial to test the feasibility, safety and efficacy of NeoTIL-ACT combined with low-dose irradiation (LDI) in patients with advanced, recurrent or metastatic solid tumors. The trial is based on lymphodepleting chemotherapy followed by LDI, and then ACT utilizing ex vivo expanded TIL, enriched for tumor antigen specificity (NeoTIL), in combination with high dose Interleukin-2 (IL-2) (optional, depending on patient's tolerance). LDI will be administered once to metastatic lesions using tomotherapy.