View clinical trials related to Triple Negative Breast Cancer.
Filter by:To evaluate the efficacy and safety of P nab-paclitaxel combined with carboplatin versus paclitaxel combined with carboplatin followed by epirubicin and cyclophosphamide in the neoadjuvant treatment of triple negative breast cancer.
To determine the efficacy (as measured by overall tumour response rate) of the combination of durvalumab and tremelimumab when given to previously treated patients with solid tumors harboring a high mutational load.
This phase II randomized trial is for patients with clinical stage II-III, ER and PR <10%, HER2-negative invasive breast carcinoma (triple negative breast cancer) for whom adjuvant RT is planned and pre-operative RT is deemed feasible by the treating radiation oncologist. Subjects will be randomized into arm A or B and treatment will last for 16 weeks. Both groups will receive Durvalumab 750mg IV Q2 weeks x 2 then a biopsy prior to durvalumab 1500mg IV Q4 weeks x 3 with paclitaxel and carboplatin IV weekly x 12. Arm B will receive radiation (24 Gy total) starting with the second durvalumab dose every other day (8Gy per fraction) for one week. Following treatment, subjects will receive SOC breast surgery and continue on to physician's choices SOC treatment during the 3 year follow up period. This study hopes to explore the impact of checkpoint blockade administration with a non- anthracycline chemotherapy regimen plus RT on post-surgery pathologic complete response (pCR) rate in the breast and axilla (ypT0/Tis ypN0) following 12 weeks of treatment and surgery.
This is a Phase II treatment study that is done to evaluate how effective and safe the combination of pembrolizumab and cisplatin work in treating participants with triple-negative breast cancer that had spread to other parts of the body, has come back, or cannot be removed by surgery. Pembrolizumab (investigational drug) is a monoclonal antibody that works by helping your immune system to fight cancer. Cisplatin is a chemotherapy drug that works by interfering with tumor cell division. Studies also suggest that treatment with chemotherapy, like cisplatin, may improve the effectiveness of pembrolizumab. This study will test the effectiveness of pembrolizumab and cisplatin in participants with advanced triple-negative breast cancer.
This is a Phase 1b, open-label, non-randomized, Dose Confirmation study. Subjects will be treated, once a week, with IV doses of Nerofe and low dose (20 mg/m2) Doxorubicin (6-8 hours from one another) in consecutive, 28-day cycles.
This is a single arm, pilot study assessing safety/feasibility and efficacy of neo-adjuvant glembatumumab vedotin (GV) in patients with high risk triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) with glycoprotein-NMB (gpNMB) expression ≥ 25%. Primary endpoints will be safety/feasibility, and secondary endpoints will be rates of pathologic complete response (pCR), and measurements of growth differentiation factor-11 (GDF11) and glycoprotein NMB (gpNMB) expression.
This is a phase 1b/2 study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of metronomic combination therapy in subjects with metastatic or unresectable TNBC who have progressed on or after anthracycline-based chemotherapy or who have refused anthracycline-based chemotherapy.
The primary purpose of this research study is to see whether adding bavituximab (an investigational drug) to the standard chemotherapy drug taxane, will improve the results of the treatment for early- stage Triple Negative Breast Cancer followed by Standard- of- Care surgery
The most important consideration in the design of this clinical trial is to ensure the safe translation of the personalized synthetic long peptide vaccine strategy. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) dictates that initial studies of biologic therapies be performed in such a way that there is a balance between the potential risks and benefits in individual patients. Consistent with these recommendations, the investigators will target patients with triple-negative breast cancer who do not have a pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. These patients typically have no gross evidence of disease following standard of care therapy (neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery and radiation therapy) but are at extremely high-risk for disease recurrence. Targeting this patient population provides a window-of-opportunity to design and manufacture the personalized cancer vaccines, maximizes the potential benefit from the vaccine as the regulatory networks associated with metastatic disease are not present, and balances risk in this patient population with extremely high risk for disease recurrence but no other treatment options.
This is a Phase II, open-label study that evaluates the safety and efficacy of IMMU-132 alone and in combination with carboplatin in patients with triple-negative breast cancer. IMMU132 will be administered once-weekly for the first 2 weeks of 3-week treatment cycles. For those patients assigned to also receive carboplatin, will receive it on the same schedules starting 30 minutes after the completion of IMMU-132 administration. Patients may receive up to a maximum total of 8 cycles.