View clinical trials related to Triple Negative Breast Cancer.
Filter by:This trial will look at a drug called SEA-TGT (also known as SGN-TGT) to find out whether it is safe for patients with solid tumors and lymphomas. It will study SEA-TGT to find out what its side effects are. A side effect is anything the drug does besides treating cancer. It will also study whether SEA-TGT works to treat solid tumors and lymphomas. The study will have four parts. Part A of the study will find out how much SEA-TGT should be given to patients. Part B will use the dose found in Part A to find out how safe SEA-TGT is and if it works to treat solid tumors and lymphomas. Part C will study how well SEA-TGT with sasanlimab works to treat solid tumors. Part D will study how well SEA-TGT with brentuximab vedotin works to treat classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL).
ATRC-101-A01 is a Phase 1b, open-label dose escalation and expansion trial of ATRC-101, an engineered fully human immunoglobulin G, subclass 1 (IgG1) antibody derived from a naturally occurring human antibody. The safety, tolerability, PK, and biological activity of ATRC-101 will be characterized when administered every two weeks (Q2W) or every 3 weeks (Q3W) as a monotherapy or in combination with other anticancer agents.
This is a a Multicenter, Open-label, Single-arm, Phase Ib Dose Escalation and Multi-cohort Expansion Clinical Study to Assess the Safety and Antitumor Activity of Niraparib in Combination with MGD013 in Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumor Who Failed Prior Treatment. This study consists of dose escalation part and dose expansion part.'3+3'design will be adopted in the dose escalation part in subjects with advanced or metastatic gastric cancer who failed prior treatment. The dose of niraparib will be fixed and determined based on baseline weight and platelet count of subjects. Dose expansion part will be expanded at the specified dose level to further assess the safety and preliminary antitumor activity.
This study evaluates the efficacy of sitravatinib in patients with metastatic breast cancer. All study participants will receive sitravatinib, 100 mg daily, until their cancer worsens, or until they develop intolerable side effects.
The reason for this study is to see if the study drug LY3435151 is safe in participants with advanced solid tumors.
This first-in-human (FIH ) study is an open-label, multicenter study that consists of a Phase 1 Dose Escalation/Expansion phase of GB1275 monotherapy or in combination with Anti-PD-1 Antibody or in combination with Standard of Care in Patients with Metastatic Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma followed by a Phase 2 Basket Expansion phase in Patients with Specified Metastatic Solid Tumors
Multi-center, open-label, first in human Phase 1 study of the safety, tolerability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of the administration of genetically modified autologous T cells (CART-TnMUC1 cells) engineered to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) capable of recognizing the tumor antigen, TnMUC1 and activating the T cell (CART- TnMUC1 cells).
This is an open label, Phase 1b/2 study with multiple treatment arms evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and preliminary efficacy of rucaparib in combination with a second anticancer therapy in participants with an advanced/metastatic solid malignancy (Phase 1b), followed by evaluation of the combination in one or more specific participant populations in an expansion phase (Phase 2 cohorts).
This is a two-part open label, non-randomized, Phase 2, study of ZEN003694 in combination with Talazoparib in patients with TNBC without germline mutations of BRCA1 or BRCA2. Part 1 is a dose escalation and Part 2 is a Simon 2-Stage design. There are 3 expansion cohorts: Expansion Cohort A (combination treatment in post-TROP2-ADC patients), Expansion Cohort B (ZEN003694 monotherapy), and Expansion Cohort C (combination treatment in TROP2-ADC-naive patients).
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) is administered to treat invasive breast cancer before surgery. It offers the opportunity to evaluate tumor response to treatment in aggressive disease, and guide additional therapies for patients with inadequate response, if detected early. Investigators propose to develop a sodium breast MRI technique that will allow to assess the early metabolic response of breast cancer to NACT, occurring before late structural changes can be detected with standard MRI. This study will scan 12 patients using 1H/23Na MRI at 7 T and DCE MRI with triple-negative breast cancer undergoing AC-T therapy (2 months of Adriamycin + Cyclophosphamide, then 3 months of Taxol): at baseline (pre-NACT); after the first AC cycle (2 weeks); after AC treatment (2 months); after complete NACT (5 months, pre-surgery).