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Found 5 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the real-world effectiveness, safety, and tolerability of ribociclib combined with an aromatase inhibitor, with or without luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) therapy, for adjuvant treatment in patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative early breast cancer at high risk of recurrence. The study also compares data from patients treated with abemaciclib plus endocrine therapy with or without LHRH, and those receiving endocrine monotherapy with or without LHRH. This observational study aims to understand treatment decisions and clinical use of ribociclib after its approval, collecting socio-economic data, quality of life, and patient compliance information. Participants receive treatment based on their physician's clinical judgment without study-assigned interventions. The treatments observed include ribociclib with an aromatase inhibitor LHRH, abemaciclib with endocrine therapy LHRH, or endocrine monotherapy LHRH. The study is conducted in various breast cancer centers and gynecological practices in Germany and Austria to represent local healthcare settings. Participants undergo assessments to monitor treatment effectiveness, safety, quality of life, and adherence to therapy over time. Data collected include clinical outcomes, adverse events, socio-economic status, and patient-reported compliance. The primary outcome measured is invasive disease-free survival over 36 months. This information will help inform clinical decision-making and improve outcomes for patients with early breast cancer in routine practice.
Actively Recruiting
This research aims to assess how satisfied people with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) are after receiving subcutaneous (under the skin) injections of ocrelizumab over a period of 12 months. The study focuses on participants diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS (RMS) or primary progressive MS (PPMS) according to 2017 McDonald criteria, who are starting ocrelizumab treatment for the first time. The main goal is to understand participant satisfaction using a special questionnaire designed for subcutaneous therapy administration. Participants will receive ocrelizumab as an injection under the skin, with the exact dosing and schedule determined by their treating physician following local medical guidelines. This observational study does not change standard care but monitors patients throughout their treatment with ocrelizumab. During the study, participants will complete the Therapy Administration Satisfaction Questionnaire for subcutaneous treatment after 12 months to measure their satisfaction. Researchers will also observe and record any relevant clinical information. The total study duration for each participant is 12 months, during which their experience and outcomes with ocrelizumab are carefully tracked.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are studying metastatic colorectal carcinoma (mCRC) patients whose tumors have a BRAFV600E mutation, which is known to have a poorer outlook compared to non-mutated cases. Standard treatments after the first therapy have shown limited success, with low response rates and short survival times. This study aims to understand how the combination of encorafenib and cetuximab works in real-world settings, focusing on effectiveness, quality of life, safety, and tolerability in German, Austrian, and Swiss patients who have already received prior therapies. Participants will receive encorafenib combined with cetuximab, treatments that target specific cancer mutations. This study is observational and non-interventional, meaning it records how patients respond to these drugs in routine care without altering their treatment. The study allows initial retrospective data collection and will follow patients longitudinally to gather comprehensive information about their experiences with the therapy. During the study, patients will be monitored for overall survival twelve months after starting treatment. Researchers will assess how well the treatment controls the cancer, side effects experienced, and patients' quality of life. Data will be collected from medical records and patient reports in regular clinical care, providing insights into the real-life use and impact of encorafenib and cetuximab for this patient group.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are collecting real-world data on patients in Germany with non-squamous metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSQ mNSCLC), including large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma if considered similar to NSCLC. The study focuses on patients starting first-line treatment with tremelimumab and durvalumab combined with platinum-based chemotherapy (TDC) following approved guidelines. This research aims to understand how genetic mutations such as KRAS, STK11, KEAP1, and TP53, as well as protein expressions like TTF-1 and PD-L1, affect treatment outcomes in routine clinical practice. The study observes patients who are scheduled to begin treatment with TDC without altering their care, as it is a non-interventional study. Data is gathered prospectively from multiple centers to analyze the effectiveness of TDC, especially in patient subgroups with certain high-risk genetic alterations. No experimental treatments are administered as part of the study. Participants will be monitored over time to measure overall survival up to two years after treatment initiation. Researchers will collect information on patient genetics, tumor markers, treatment responses, and survival outcomes. The study also ensures safety by following approved treatment guidelines and requires informed consent. The aim is to gather detailed data to support better biomarker-guided treatment decisions for NSQ mNSCLC.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness and safety of a subcutaneous cladribine treatment for patients with hairy cell leukemia who need therapy. This study focuses on patients who are either untreated or have only been pretreated with alpha-interferon. It aims to assess remission rates four months after treatment and whether a second cycle benefits those with a non-optimal response, defined by residual disease or partial remission. Participants receive cladribine 0.14 mg/kg as a subcutaneous bolus injection once daily for five consecutive days. If the response after the first cycle is not optimal, patients may receive a second cycle of the drug to improve their remission status. This treatment approach is being studied in a Phase 2/3 clinical trial setting. During the study, remission status is evaluated four months after the first treatment cycle. Patients undergo assessments to detect residual disease in bone marrow and peripheral blood. Researchers monitor the rate of complete remissions and any treatment-related toxicities. The overall health, laboratory tests, and disease markers are regularly checked throughout the study period to ensure safety and to measure the treatment's impact.