Nivolumab

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Found 42 Actively Recruiting clinical trials

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RECRUITING

This is a first in human, Phase 0/1, open-label study of 177Lu-RAD204 consisting of an Imaging Period with 177Lu-RAD204im (imaging dose) and a Treatment Period with 177Lu-RAD204tr (treatment dose) to determine the recommended dose(s) for future exploration of 177Lu-RAD204 in participants with PDL1+ advanced solid tumors. Screening Period: Screening Period of up to 4 weeks. Phase 0 (Imaging Period): Low dose (10mCi) of 177Lu-RAD204 administered on Imaging Day 1 with a follow-up period of up to 2 weeks to assess imaging, safety and dosimetry. The dose may be increased, if needed, to improve image quality. Phase 1 (treatment Period): 177Lu-RAD204tr dose escalation * Treatment Period with each cycle lasting 6 weeks. Extension of the planned dose intervals are possible following discussion and agreement between the Sponsor and Investigator. * Participants may be treated with multiple cycles, as long as they appear to derive clinical benefit as determined by the Investigator and provided there is adequate clinical safety and organ dosimetry data. * Dose Limiting Toxicity (DLT) observation period for 177Lu-RAD204tr is 6 weeks following the first injection of 177Lu-RAD204tr. * Should an alternative treatment schedule be explored, the DLT observation period for 177Lu-RAD204tr at that dose level will be the proposed cycle duration.

18+ yearsAll GendersEARLY_PHASE1
5 locations
A

RECRUITING

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major public health threat in China. At present, a functional cure, also known as clinical cure or sustained Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, is recommended as the ideal endpoint of HBV treatment. However, HBsAg loss can be achieved in less than 10% of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients treated with current available antiviral drug interferon (IFNα) or nucleos(t)ide analogues (NAs) monotherapy. With the support of the national major special funding for infectious diseases from "11th Five-Year Plan" to "13th Five-Year Plan", we have implemented a pioneer clinical study of sequential combination of IFNα therapy on NAs to treat NAs-treated CHB patients (ie. New Switch Study). This is the world's first clinical trial aiming to functional cure, which increased the rate of HBsAg loss to 15% in the overall population in our study, and to 30-50% among those with lower baseline HBsAg levels. How to further improve the HBsAg loss rate is an urgent issue for us. The key point of achieving functional cure is to reverse the HBV-specific T cell exhaustion and establish the long-term immune control against HBV infection. Programmed death-1 (PD-1)/ programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) axis blockade has been demonstrated to reinvigorate exhausted CD8+ T cells, and would be a potential strategy to treat chronic HBV infection. In this study, a large multicenter prospective study will be performed to explore the safety and efficacy of a novel combination strategy involving immune checkpoint inhibitor (anti-PD-1 antibody) in CHB patients, observe the HBsAg loss rate in NA-treated CHB patients receiving this combination strategy, evaluate the potential of breaking immune tolerance by this strategy, and further assess its efficacy to further improve the clinical cure rate on the basis of New Switch Study. Based on New Switch Study, this study further attempts to reverse T cell exhaustion in CHB patients, explore a novel platform of combination therapy development for clinical cure, and ultimately increase the HBsAg loss rate to higher than 50% in overall patients. The implementation of the project is expected to reduce the burden of HBV infection in China and contribute to the goal of global elimination of hepatitis B and C by 2030 (WHO 2030).

18-70 yearsAll GendersPHASE2
1 location
A

RECRUITING

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major public health threat in China. At present, a functional cure, also known as clinical cure or sustained Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, is recommended as the ideal endpoint of HBV treatment. However, HBsAg loss can be achieved in less than 10% of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients treated with current available antiviral drug interferon (IFNα) or nucleos(t)ide analogues (NAs) monotherapy. With the support of the national major special funding for infectious diseases from "11th Five-Year Plan" to "13th Five-Year Plan", we have implemented a pioneer clinical study of sequential combination of IFNα therapy on NAs to treat NAs-treated CHB patients (ie. New Switch Study). This is the world's first clinical trial aiming to functional cure, which increased the rate of HBsAg loss to 15% in the overall population in our study, and to 30-50% among those with lower baseline HBsAg levels. How to further improve the HBsAg loss rate is an urgent issue for us. The key point of achieving functional cure is to reverse the HBV-specific T cell exhaustion and establish the long-term immune control against HBV infection. (Programmed death-1) PD-1/programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) axis blockade has been demonstrated to reinvigorate exhausted CD8+ T cells, and would be a potential strategy to treat chronic HBV infection. In this study, a large multicenter prospective study will be performed to explore the safety and efficacy of a novel combination strategy involving immune checkpoint inhibitor (anti-PD-1 antibody) and IFNα in CHB patients, observe the HBsAg loss rate in NA-treated CHB patients receiving this combination strategy, evaluate the potential of breaking immune tolerance by this strategy, and further assess its efficacy to further improve the clinical cure rate on the basis of New Switch Study. Based on New Switch Study, this study further attempts to reverse T cell exhaustion in CHB patients, explore a novel platform of combination therapy development for clinical cure, and ultimately increase the HBsAg loss rate to higher than 50% in overall patients. The implementation of the project is expected to reduce the burden of HBV infection in China and contribute to the goal of global elimination of hepatitis B and C by 2030 (WHO 2030).

18-70 yearsAll GendersPHASE2
1 location
A

RECRUITING

The Episwitch CiRT® (Checkpoint inhibitor Response Test) predicts how a patient will respond to immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies by delivering a binary response likelihood profile (High Probability vs. Low Probability). Patients who have been diagnosed with stage III and IV cancer and who are candidates and/or planned to receive immune check point inhibitors as a therapy now or in near future will be offered the Episwitch CiRT™ before starting treatment or if on active treatment. Those patients with high probability of response to ICI will undergo repeat testing every three months. Patients will be followed for up to six months. Treatment administered, disease-free survival, overall survival, stable disease, progressive disease, complete response, time to recurrence, physician questionnaires and patient-reported outcomes will be recorded for six months. Comprehensive data of Social Determinants of Health (SDoH) will be collected to identify any correlation to unmet Health Related Social Needs (HrSN) and likelihood to response and/or resistance

18+ yearsAll Genders
3 locations
A

RECRUITING

Systemic therapy is the standard treatment for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with metastasis. However, metastases with limited number (oligometastasis) can represent a subtype and transition point between localized disease and widespread metastases. Thus, eliminating metastases could be advantageous and beneficial to the prognosis if feasible and permitted. Image-guided ablation therapy, such as microwave ablation (MWA), radiofrequency ablation (RFA), and cryoablation, has attracted great interest as a minimally invasive approach against intrathoracic metastases. Recently, ablation has been used on patients with pulmonary metastases from various cancers. This technique yields high proportions of sustained complete responses and is associated with relatively low morbidity. Thus, we conduct this multicenter single arm study to explore the efficacy, safety of lenvatinib and PD-1 inhibitor with metastases-directed ablation in advanced HCC. This study focuses on the management of ablation of oligometastasis therapy combined with lenvatinib and PD-1 inhibitor. This study aims to evaluate the survival benefits of ablating oligometastasis for advanced HCC.

18-75 yearsAll GendersNA
1 location
B

RECRUITING

Blank-microsphere transcatheter arterial embolization (bTAE) and hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) of oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin are effective and safe for hepatocellular carcinoma. Lenvatinib is non-inferior to sorafenib in overall survival in untreated advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. Camrelizumab, a programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) inhibitor, is effective and tolerable in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. No study has evaluated bTAE-HAIC plus Lenvatinib and Camrelizumab. Thus, the investigators carried out this prospective, single-arm study to find out it.

18-75 yearsAll GendersNA
1 location
C

RECRUITING

The prognosis of recurrent and metastatic triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is poor, and chemotherapy is still the main treatment for TNBC. Some studies have shown that combination therapy of antibodies targeting cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) significantly improves clinical benefit over PD-1 antibody alone. However, broad application of this combination has been limited by toxicities. Cadonilimab is a humanized immunoglobulin G1 bispecific antibody targeting PD-1 and CTLA-4. It mutates to eliminate Fc receptor and complement-mediated cytotoxic effects. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Cadonilimab combined with chemotherapy as a first or second-line treatment of recurrent and metastatic TNBC. This study is a multicenter, single arm, phase II, non randomized, open label, Simon two-stage design. It is planned to enroll 27 late stage TNBC patients.

18-70 yearsAll GendersPHASE2
1 location
C

RECRUITING

The dual immunotherapy regimen significantly outperformed previous chemotherapy or immunomonotherapy for MSS type advanced CRC in two key efficacy indicators, ORR and PFS. Researchers have also conducted in-depth analysis of patient transcriptomics, immune microenvironment characteristics, and other related information, which is expected to guide more accurate immune combination therapy for CRC in the future. Our team plans to conduct a multicenter, prospective, single arm clinical trial in patients with RAS mutant MSS unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer, with a focus on observing the 1-year progression free survival rate of the combination of two chemotherapy drugs, bevacizumab and Cadonilimab, as well as ORR, perioperative safety, and long-term survival.

18-75 yearsAll GendersPHASE2
1 location
C

RECRUITING

Patients with resectable melanoma can benefit from neoadjuvant therapy, including improved surgical outcomes, precise management of patients based on neoadjuvant response, and analysis of resistance mechanisms through histological sections for subsequent treatment. At present, there have been a number of clinical trials exploring the effect of neoadjuvant regimens for melanoma, and some published results have shown that neoadjuvant therapy can lead to a higher pathological response rate, thereby improving the RFS of patients. In the past, this site has carried out a clinical study of Camrelizumab combined with Apatinib and Temozolomide for first-line treatment of unresectable acral melanoma, with a high preliminary clinical response rate and safety. Based on this, this study intends to evaluate the neoadjuvant treatment of completely resectable melanoma with Camrelizumab combined with Apatinib and Temozolomide in patients with stage III and IIB, IIC high-risk melanoma. To comprehensively evaluate the short-term and long-term benefits of neoadjuvant therapy and provide an important reference for neoadjuvant treatment strategies in the acral melanoma population.

18-75 yearsAll GendersPHASE2
1 location
C

RECRUITING

This study mainly compared the efficacy and safety of 6\*TCb (docetaxel+carboplatin)+carrelizumab regimen and 6\*TCb regimen in neoadjuvant chemotherapy for triple-negative breast cancer. Patients who met the inclusion criteria were randomly assigned to the experimental group and the control group in a 2:1 ratio. * The experimental group received 6 cycles of TCb+carrelizumab (docetaxel 75mg/m2 on the first day + carboplatin AUC=6, on the first day; camrelizumab 200mg on the third day) regimen neoadjuvant chemotherapy, every 21 days is a cycle. * The control group received 6 cycles of TCb (docetaxel 75mg/m2 on the first day + carboplatin AUC=6 on the first day) regimen neoadjuvant chemotherapy, every 21 days as a cycle. The efficacy and safety of the two chemotherapy regimens on neoadjuvant chemotherapy for triple-negative breast cancer were evaluated by PCR, EFS, DFS, DDFS and ORR after surgery.

18-70 yearsFEMALEPHASE2
1 location

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