View clinical trials related to Solid Tumor, Adult.
Filter by:Expected to complete 7 to 18 evaluable subjects (patients with advanced solid tumors),3 dose groups.A modified "3+3" dose-escalation design is utilized,This includes both accelerated dose escalation and traditional "3+3" dose escalation.The first dose group is accelerated titration,The first dose group is an accelerated titration of 1 to 6 evaluable subjects;The second and third dose groups are based on the traditional "3+3" dose-escalation principle,The second and third dose groups are based on the traditional "3+3" dose-escalation principle, with 3 to 6 evaluable subjects enrolled respectively.
DF6215-001 is a study of a modified human cytokine (interleukin-2; IL-2) that retains the ability to bind to a certain part of the IL-2 receptor on a subset of white blood cells (lymphocytes), which can help recognize and kill tumor cells. The study will occur in two phases. The first phase will be a dose escalation phase, enrolling patients with various types of solid tumors. The second phase, Phase 1b, will include a dose expansion using the best dose selected from the first phase of the study. A cohort will be opened with eligible patients having a select solid tumor.
The purpose of this study is to find out whether avutometinib is a safe treatment for advanced or recurrent solid tumor cancers in children and young adults. Researchers will look for the highest dose of avutometinib that is safe and cause few or mild side effects.
This is a sequential, ascending-dose, multicenter study conducted in patients with refractory solid tumors designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of DCR-STAT3.
The goal of this observational study is to measure and try to reduce leakage in precision medicine care in the community cancer clinic. The goal of precision medicine is to identify the best possible therapy the the patient based on the biology of the tumor. Leakage is defined as a failure or inefficiency of the system that leads to dropped or lost testing, reporting or action (including drug selection). It has been observed that there are healthcare disparities in the community setting compared to academic medical centers, particularly in the use of precision medicine. The main questions the study aims to answer are: - How much leakage occurs in the use of precision medicine in the community setting? - Can we reduce leakage by providing access to better tools and services typically found in the academic medical centers? Participants will not be directly impacted and will receive standard of care. Measurements will be made of how often physicians select the appropriate test for patients, and how often they select the most appropriate therapy for their patients before and after the implementation of tools created to reduce leakage. We hope to reduce leakage in with the use of advanced tools and services, and use this study as a model to improve healthcare in the community cancer setting.
This is an open-label, single-arm, dose-escalation, and dose-expansion clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of ABO2011 monotherapy in patients with advanced solid tumors who have progressed or metastasized after systemic standard of treatment.
This clinical trial is designed as a multi-center, open-label, dose-escalation, dose-expansion, phase 1 clinical trial and will be evaluating the safety and efficacy of PB101 in patients with advanced solid tumors who have progressed after standard of care. PB101 may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking blood flow to the tumor and modulating the tumor microenvironment.
This is an open-label, dose escalation and dose expansion, multi-center phase I study evaluating the safety and tolerability of CF33-CD19 administered intravenously (IV) or intratumorally (IT) in combination with blinatumomab in adults with advanced or metastatic solid tumors.
This is a phase I/II, open-label, multicenter study . During the study, subjects will be evaluated for safety, toxicity, tolerability, PK/PD, immunogenicity, biomarkers, and antitumor activity of HB0045. The phase I study will enroll up to 54 subjects with advanced solid tumors who have progressed on or after standard of care therapy and for whom there is no further treatment available that in the judgement of the patient's physician would be beneficial. One cycle is defined as 21 days.
The goal of this study is to test A2B694, an autologous logic-gated Tmod™ CAR T-cell product in subjects with solid tumors including colorectal cancer (CRC), pancreatic cancer (PANC), non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), ovarian cancer (OVCA), mesothelioma (MESO), and other solid tumors that express MSLN and have lost HLA-A*02 expression. The main questions this study aims to answer are: Phase 1: What is the recommended dose of A2B694 that is safe for patients Phase 2: Does the recommended dose of A2B694 kill the solid tumor cells and protect the patient's healthy cells Participants will be required to perform study procedures and assessments, and will also receive the following study treatments: Enrollment and Apheresis in BASECAMP-1 (NCT04981119) Preconditioning Lymphodepletion (PCLD) Regimen A2B694 Tmod CAR T cells at the assigned dose