View clinical trials related to Triple Negative Breast Cancer.
Filter by:This study is a Phase II, multi-site, randomized, open-label clinical study to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of BNT327 at two dose levels in combination with chemotherapeutic agents in the first- and second-line treatment of participants with locally advanced/metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (mTNBC).
Studies have reported that tumors with the same immunogenic mutations may induce T cell receptor (TCR) domains with similar antigen recognition functions. By assembling the complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) of TCRs from RNA-seq data and correlating them with 9142 samples from TCGA data, an in-depth analysis of the TCR pool in the tumor microenvironment found a strong correlation between the CDR3 sequences of tumor-infiltrating T cells and tumor mutation burden. Fairfax et al. found that in patients responding to tumor immunotherapy, the TCR immune pool of CD8+ T cells produces many clones with extremely high abundance (exceeding 0.5%) . Cader et al. also found significant changes in the TCR immune pool of patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma responding to PD-1 tumor immunotherapy. Based on these theoretical foundations, evaluating the dynamic changes of the TCR immune pool is expected to be used to analyze the immune characteristics and changes in diseases such as malignant tumors.
This is a phase II, single-centered, open-label, single-armed study in patients with early triple-negative breast cancer that will evaluate the pathological complete response (pCR) rate of a non-anthracycline-based chemo-immunotherapy regimen. The trial includes a lead-in cycle of pembrolizumab, then a combination of paclitaxel, carboplatin, and pembrolizumab in the neoadjuvant setting.
This is an open-label, Phase 1/2 study to determine the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of APL-5125 for the treatment of selected locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors with particular focus on Colorectal carcinoma (CRC).
TILs have been shown to be predictive for response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with TNBC in multiple studies (Level-1B evidence for clinical validity as per REMARK criteria). TNBC patients with excellent survival outcome and low incidence of metastasis can be identified using a manual TIL score. Furthermore, a fully end-to-end blinded evaluation of the same algorithm to be used in this study achieved >90% accuracy for predicting disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) in the pooled analysis of seven adjuvant phase-III TNBC trials.
This is a randomized, open-label study comparing the efficacy and safety of adjuvant sacituzumab tirumotecan (sac-TMT; MK-2870) in combination with pembrolizumab compared to treatment of physician's choice (TPC) in participants with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who received neoadjuvant therapy and did not achieve a pathological complete response (pCR) at surgery. The primary objective is to compare sac-TMT plus pembrolizumab to TPC (pembrolizumab or pembrolizumab plus capecitabine) with respect to invasive disease-free survival (iDFS) per investigator assessment. It is hypothesized that sac-TMT plus pembrolizumab is superior to TPC with respect to iDFS per investigator assessment.
This trial is a registered phase III, randomized, open-label, multicenter study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of BL-B01D1 in patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic Triple-Negative breast cancer after taxane failure.
Phase II, randomized, Active-controlled open label trial for treatment of high risk, HR-/HER2- (triple negative) breast cancer, with two sequences of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on a background of pembrolizumab
To evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of oral all-trans retinoic acid in combination with toripalimab in patients with locally advanced, recurrent, or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer who had failed second-line and subsequent therapy.
About 10-20% of all individuals with breast cancer have a so-called triple-negative tumor (TNBC). This type of breast cancer has a particularly unfavorable course and a higher mortality rate compared to other forms of breast cancer. Research studies show that it is important for individuals with TNBC to achieve a so-called pathologic complete response (pCR) to treatment. In the phase II study SAKK 66/22, it is being investigated whether the administration of the drug INT230-6 before surgery for breast cancer can increase the rate of pCR in the tumor and affected lymph nodes. The tolerability of INT230-6 as well as other factors such as response to treatment and the possibility of breast-conserving surgery are also being examined.