View clinical trials related to Urinary Bladder Neoplasms.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about a novel application of lidocaine injection in male patients who needs rigid cycstoscopy test. The main question it aims to answer is:Does New Application of Lidocaine Liquid Provide Pain Relief for Patients During Cystoscopy? Before the cycstoscopy,Participants will be randomly divided into three different anesthesia mode groups,namely are Group A (intraurethral lidocaine gel alone), Group B (intraurethral lidocaine gel + lidocaine 2% injection), and Group C (intraurethral lidocaine gel + liquid paraffinl).Patients only need to prepare and cooperate according to routine surgical operations,which is group B or group C.
This is an open-label, single-arm, Phase 1b/2 study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of milademetan in combination with atezolizumab in patients with advanced solid tumors with confirmed homozygous CDKN2A loss and WT TP53 who have progressed on or are refractory to prior PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor therapy and who, in the opinion of the Investigator, are unlikely to tolerate or derive clinically meaningful benefit from other therapy. This study will determine the recommended dose of milademetan when given in combination with atezolizumab (the combination RP2D) using a dose de-escalation safety assessment cohort (Phase 1b). Following identification of the combination RP2D, the safety profile and preliminary anti-tumor activity of the combination RP2D will be evaluated in a larger population in a dose expansion cohort (Phase 2).
Platinum-based chemotherapy remains the standard of care for advanced/metastatic unresectable bladder cancer. The JAVELIN Bladder 100 and HCRN GU14-182 trials showed that maintenance immune checkpoint inhibition(ICI) for those that achieved disease control could prolong progression-free survival (overall survival benefit in JAVELIN may have been related to the lack of guaranteed crossover at time of progression). Of note, both of these studies showed consistency with regards to the magnitude of the PFS benefit which was ~40% vs ~20% at 6-months with maintenance ICI compared to BSC/placebo. Maintenance avelumab is now category 1 on the NCCN guidelines. However, some patients prefer prolonged chemotherapy responses and literature supports a treatment break without effecting longevity. The underlying risk resides in the selection of patients with some (currently difficult to diagnose) progressing rapidly. This trial proposes to use ctDNA to stratify chemo-responsive patients to active surveillance (i.e. a ctDNA responder referred to here as "ctDNA-") vs SOC maintenance pembrolizumab (ctDNA+). All patients will be treated with SOC chemotherapy and only patients with an objective (RECIST) response will be stratified. This is a non-randomized phase 2 study with two arms based on ctDNA 1. Pembrolizumab (ctDNA non-responder) maintenance therapy arm (SOC) 2. Active surveillance arm (ctDNA responders) with serial ctDNA and crossover 1st line chemotherapy is based on physician discretion choice as described in the protocol. Patients with metastatic Urothelial Cancer are enrolled prior to initiation of SOC chemotherapy. Based on ORR (CR + PR), it is estimated that 75 patients will need to enroll onto the protocol to find 25 responders for the two arms.
This phase II trial compares the effect of erdafitinib alone to using the combination of erdafitinib and atezolizumab in treating patients with bladder cancer whose tumor invades the muscular bladder wall (muscle invasive)and who are ineligible for treatment with a chemotherapy drug called cisplatin. This trial also determines whether these treatment approaches are better than the usual approach for treating this type of cancer. The usual approach for treatment of someone with muscle invasive bladder cancer is chemotherapy with a drug called cisplatin followed by surgery (most common), or chemoradiation (radiation combined with chemotherapy) to the bladder (in some patients). However, half of the patients cannot get cisplatin due to safety concerns. This study has a screening step. The purpose of this step is to test patient's tumor to find out if it has a specific change (alteration) in the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) gene to determine patient's eligibility for this trial. Alteration of the FGFR gene causes bladder cancer cells to grow and divide abnormally. Erdafitinib is in a class of medications called kinase inhibitors. It works by blocking the action of an abnormal FGFR protein. This may help keep cancer cells from growing and may kill them. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as atezolizumab, may help the body's immune system attack the cancer, and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Giving erdafitinib alone or in combination with atezolizumab may help to shrink tumor cells at the time of surgery better than the usual treatment in muscle invasive bladder cancer.
A pilot window of opportunity study of FL-101 in patients with non-metastatic MIBC who are eligible for radical cystectomy (RC) but are ineligible for, or decline, cisplatin-based neoadjuvant therapy.
This single arm pilot study will evaluate the feasibility and acceptability for perioperative Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) and CGA-directed supportive and restorative care for patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who are planned to undergo preoperative chemotherapy.
This is a single centre, single arm feasibility study assessing the feasibility of using computer vision methods to recreate the 3D bladder shape and to then map the cystoscopy images onto this bladder shape. If feasible, this 3D reconstructed shape would be spatially registered to radiological images (CT, MR) that are then used during radiation treatment planning. This analysis would not be used for making any clinical treatment decisions on the patient.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and preliminary anti-tumor activity of PF-07225570 alone or in combination with an anti-PD-1 antibody in participants with recurrent non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. This study consists of 2 parts, single agent dose escalation (Part 1A), dose finding of PF-07225570 in combination with anti-PD-1 antibody (Part 1B) and dose expansion (Part 2).
We will conduct a Phase I trial testing whether local cystoscopic injection of tremelimumab into the bladder wall in combination with systemic administration of durvalumab in localized bladder cancer will stimulate an effective anti-tumour immune response with minimal systemic immune response and clinical toxicity.
The aim of this research is to see whether using a drug that blocks a protein called FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor) prior to surgery is safe and effective in patients with bladder cancer that have mutations in FGFR3 or FGFR2 and who cannot receive chemotherapy with cisplatin prior to surgery The name of the study drug involved in this study is: - Infigratinib