Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Showing 1-20 of 20 trials
NCT06878248
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate CLBR001 and ABBV-461 as a treatment for patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer. The goals are to establish the safety and efficacy of the combination therapy while establishing the optimal biologic doses. Patients will be administered a single infusion of CLBR001 cells followed by cycles of ABBV-461 with regular assessments of safety and disease response to treatment.
NCT06715826
The aim of this study is to establish and optimize the Trop2/HER2-targeted PET/CT imaging method, and its physiological and pathological distribution characteristics, on the basis of which the diagnostic efficacy of the above imaging agents in breast cancer will be evaluated.
NCT07299409
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the drug Sacituzumab govitecan (SG) reduces disease progression when used as a first-line treatment in adults with advanced triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who have not received prior treatments in the advanced setting. It will also look at whether the effectiveness of the drug differs between TNBC adults with homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) subtypes and those with non-HRD subtypes. The main questions this study aims to answer are: * Will patients with advanced TNBC who haven't received prior treatment in the advanced setting respond better (i.e., slowed disease progression) when given SG as a first-line treatment? * Does the overall response rate of SG differ between HRD vs non-HRD advanced TNBC patients without prior treatment in the advanced setting? Participants will: * Be given drug SG on days 1 and 8 of 21-day cycle(s) * Will continue (repeat) 21-day cycles until disease progression or voluntary withdrawal * Visit the clinic for treatments on days 1 and 8 * Have long-term follow-up every 12 weeks via phone or in-clinic
NCT06889610
This study focuses on the treatment of liver metastases from three common cancers: colorectal cancer, triple-negative breast cancer and melanoma. Currently, there are limitations in the treatment of liver metastases of these cancers. Multimodal thermophysical ablation therapy can reshape the tumor microenvironment, release neoantigens, and act as an in-situ vaccine. On this basis, the combination of multimodal ablation with immunotherapeutic drugs such as pucotenlimab will be explored. The efficacy and safety of this combination therapy in patients with liver metastases of solid tumors will be investigated, with the expectation of breaking through the existing treatment limitations.
NCT05735080
Incyclix Bio (Incyclix) is developing INX-315 as an oral, small molecule inhibitor of cyclin dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) for the treatment of human cancers. This first-in-human study is designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and preliminary antitumor activity of INX-315 in patients with recurrent advanced/metastatic cancer, including hormone receptor positive (HR+)/Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 Negative (HER2-) breast cancer who progressed on a prior cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor (CDK4/6i) regimen, and CCNE1-amplified solid tumors who progressed on standard of care treatment. The study will be conducted in 3 parts: Part A (INX-315 monotherapy dose escalation and combination therapy with fulvestrant), Part B (ovarian cancer INX-315 monotherapy dose expansion), and Part C (INX-315 combination therapy with abemaciclib \[a CDK4/6i\] and fulvestrant \[a SERD\] in advanced/metastatic breast cancer; dose escalation and expansion).
NCT06616987
Prevention of Sacituzumab Govitecan-related Neutropenia in Patients with metastatic Triple Nagative Breast Cancer who have received at least one, and no more than two, prior standard of care chemotherapy regimens
NCT06857305
Eribulin is a soft spongin-like inhibitor of mitotic microtubule dynamics in cells. From the evidence of efficacy, the STUDY 305 and STUDY 301 studies suggest that eribulin improves PFS and OS in patients with breast cancer. Eribulin has a good safety profile with a low incidence of patient-perceivable adverse effects, with myelosuppression being the main adverse effect, and neutropenia, anemia, and also fatigue being the most common adverse effects. However, serious neutropenia, may result in delayed dosing, dose reduction or discontinuation in some patients. In studies of standard regimen therapy with eribulin, grade 3-4 neutropenia occurred in approximately 45% of patients, of which approximately 25% required dose adjustment or discontinuation of therapy, which has become an urgent clinical problem in the treatment of eribulin. Therefore, a modified bi-weekly regimen of eribulin (1.4 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1 and 15 of a 28-day cycle), based on the standard regimen (1.4 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle), is expected to improve the safety of eribulin administration without compromising efficacy, in order to minimize dose reductions of the medication and interruptions of therapy, thereby improving patients' quality of life. There is still a lack of head-to-head studies on the efficacy and safety of the combination of eribulin standard regimen and biweekly regimen in HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, and the treatment data in the Chinese population need to be further explored. The aim of this study is to explore the efficacy and safety of eribulin biweekly regimen compared with the standard regimen in patients with locally recurrent or metastatic HER2-negative breast cancer, and to provide a clinical evidence-based basis for the optimization of eribulin treatment regimen.
NCT05837533
Both in Mexico and in the world, breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women. It is estimated that in 2020, 28.2% of the new cancer cases reported in our country correspond to breast cancer, which translates to 30,000 new cases. In addition, it is relevant to mention that approximately 12% of Mexican patients are diagnosed with stage IV breast cancer and it is estimated that 20-30% of women with early stage cancer will have a distant recurrence of the disease. Thus, about 40% of patients will find themselves in a metastatic stage at some point in their breast cancer journey. Various studies, including Mexico, report that only half of patients with metastatic breast cancer are aware that their disease is not curable, 31% say they are not sure, and 17% think it is curable. Likewise, 58% considered that they did not have enough knowledge to actively participate in conversations about their therapeutic options, which means that 40% reported difficulty talking about treatments with their doctors. This has shown that there are suboptimal levels of knowledge information on curability, treatment objectives and prognosis of their condition in patients with metastatic breast cancer. This lack of understanding is alarming given that a general understanding of the disease is crucial for informed decision making and adherence to cancer treatment. Due to these alarming results, we seek to recruit women ≥18 years of age who are candidates to start first- or second-line treatment for de novo or recurrent metastatic breast cancer from various hospital centers in the country with public and private coverage, including Hospital Zambrano Hellion TecSalud as coordinating center in Nuevo León. The objective will be to evaluate whether a systematized communication model for patients with metastatic breast cancer allows increasing knowledge about the non-curative nature of treatment, compared to usual care.
NCT06718933
In phase Ib, our study is aimed to evaluate the safety and tolerance of SHR-A1811 combined with pyrotinib in breast cancer with brain metastasis, and confirm the recommended phase 2 dose combined with preliminary results of efficacy. In phase II, our study is aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SHR-A1811 combined with pyrotinib and bevacizumab at RP2D in breast cancer with brain metastasis.
NCT03328026
This is an open-label, phase I/II double arm study of the SV-BR-1-GM regimen in combination with retifanlimab in patients with metastatic or locally recurrent breast cancer who have failed standard therapy. Patients will receive the SV-BR-1-GM regimen with combination immunotherapy. There will be an initial evaluation of the combination of the SV-BR-1-GM regimen with retifanlimab every 3 weeks. If this is found to be safe and well tolerated in a cohort of at least 12 patients (dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) in less than 30% of the patients evaluated), then an expansion cohort of up to 24 patients will be treated with that combination. These will be randomized to two regimens differing in the timing of checkpoint inhibitor administration.
NCT04215146
The purpose of this study is to find out the possible anti-cancer effect of pelareorep in combination with chemotherapy \[paclitaxel\] and avelumab in treating a type of breast cancer called Hormone Receptor positive (HR+)/Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 negative(HER2-) breast cancer, which is either locally advanced or has metastasized (cancer that has spread in your body). The study will investigate if pelareorep in combination with paclitaxel and avelumab is more effective than paclitaxel alone, or pelareorep and paclitaxel. The safety of the combination treatments will also be evaluated.
NCT05420779
This research study is evaluating the efficacy and safety of TSL-1502 capsules in patients with breast cancer, will be included HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer patients with germline BRCA mutations.
NCT04240106
This study evalues the efficacy -as determined by the clinical benefit rate (CBR)- of niraparib in combination with AIs in unresectable locally advanced or metastatic HR-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer patients harboring either gBRCAms or gBRCAwt and HRD. The planned number of patients is 23. Investigational product is Niraparib and will be administered daily continuously in 28-day cycles plus aromatase Inhibitors. Total study duration is 36 months and until 5 years of follow up.
NCT05759572
This study is a prospective, open-label, phase II clinical study for patients with HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer.
NCT05155566
To describe patient demographics, clinical characteristics, treatment patterns and clinical outcomes of adult female patients who have received palbociclib combination treatments as first line therapy, regardless of combination partner and labelled use in real world settings across Latin America.
NCT05033769
After progression of disease after one chemotherapy, metastatic breast cancer patients will be randomized 1:1 to one of the following treatment arms: Arm A. Eribulin Arm B. Paclitaxel Blood draws for immune analysis will be performed before start of therapy, on day 1 of cycle 2 and on day 21 of cycle 4 (end of therapy) for the primary study aim. Patients will be treated under study conditions for a maximum of 4 therapy cycles.
NCT05463276
This cross-sectional study, conducted at the Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation (SIUT), involved a retrospective data review of all the patients diagnosed with breast cancer from March 2017 to December 2021. The demographic characteristics, clinical presentation, stage of the disease, and histopathological characteristics were analyzed.
NCT04047459
The project aims at unraveling the role of organ-specific endothelia mediating the preferential metastasisation of breast cancer cells to bone by using a multi-faceted approach, integrating microfluidics and transcriptomic profiling. Based on a recently study published by the investigators \[Jeon et al., PNAS 2015\], it can be hypothesized that phenotypic differences at the level of organ-specific endothelial cells are able to drive the preferential extravasation of breast cancer cells to specific sites. Hence, the transcriptional profile of primary organ-specific endothelial cells derived from healthy patients (i.e. non-affected by breast cancer) will be analyzed to identify phenotypic differences between organ-specific populations of endothelial cells. These analyses will allow to identify potential target genes involved in the organ-specific extravasation of cancer cells (i.e. genes differentially expressed by endothelia of preferential and non-preferential metastasisation sites). The selected genes will be silenced and the effect of gene silencing will be evaluated through microfluidic in vitro organ-specific 3D models designed to study cancer cell extravasation.
NCT03086785
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of patients who receive apatinib single or combined capecitabine for treatment of patients with metastatic her-2 negative breast cancer.
NCT01108016
The study will answer two questions about women with breast cancer in rural communities: 1. Will they find this support group format utilizing videoconferencing acceptable and rewarding? 2. Will they report a greater sense of emotional and informational support, and less depression and traumatic stress, than the control groups of women who wait to participate until after the first groups have ended?