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Found 238 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are conducting a phase II, multicenter, open-label trial to investigate the combination of Fruquintinib and Tislelizumab in patients with microsatellite stable (MSS) or proficient mismatch repair (pMMR) metastatic colorectal cancer who do not have active liver metastases. The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of this combination in comparison to a control treatment for this specific group of patients. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups. The experimental group will receive oral Fruquintinib (5 mg daily for 21 days in each 28-day cycle) along with intravenous Tislelizumab (400 mg every 42 days). The control group will be treated with oral Trifluridine/tipiracil (35 mg/m2 twice daily on days 1-5 and 8-12 of each 28-day cycle) plus intravenous Bevacizumab (5 mg/kg every 14 days). Treatment continues until disease progression, unacceptable side effects, patient choice, or a maximum of 15 months. During the study, patients will undergo regular assessments including imaging to monitor disease status and safety evaluations. Follow-up will continue for up to 18 months after the last patient enrolls or until death, withdrawal, or loss to follow-up. The main outcome measure is the efficacy of Fruquintinib combined with Tislelizumab in this patient population over a 54-month period.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are assessing the safety and effects of Ritlecitinib, a study medicine, for treating hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), a condition causing long-lasting, painful red skin lumps. This phase 2 study focuses on adults with moderate to severe HS who have not responded well to or cannot tolerate antibiotics. The goal is to compare experiences and outcomes between those receiving Ritlecitinib and those receiving a placebo. Participants will be randomly assigned to take either Ritlecitinib or a placebo pill once daily at home. The treatment involves an initial loading dose of Ritlecitinib for 8 weeks, followed by an 8-week maintenance dose, totaling 16 weeks of treatment. The placebo group will receive a matching pill with no active medicine. Over approximately 24 weeks, including screening and follow-up, participants will attend around 10 clinic visits for health evaluations, including physical exams, blood and urine tests, vital signs, chest X-rays, ECGs, hearing tests, and questionnaires. They will also track their medication intake and HS symptoms daily using an electronic diary on a mobile phone. The study will measure how many patients achieve at least a 50% improvement in HS symptoms by week 16 to evaluate treatment response and safety.
Actively Recruiting
Healthy Volunteer
Researchers are evaluating the safety, tolerability, and levels of the study drug SYX-5219 in healthy volunteers and people with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD). This multi-part, Phase 1, first-in-human study includes participants aged 18 to 65 years. The study aims to understand how SYX-5219 behaves in the body and to assess its safety in different dosing scenarios, including single and multiple doses as well as food effects. The study is divided into three parts. Part 1 involves single ascending doses (SAD) and a food effect evaluation in up to 48 healthy volunteers, who receive oral capsules of SYX-5219 or placebo. Part 2 tests multiple ascending doses (MAD) in up to 24 healthy volunteers with multiple oral doses given over a treatment period. Part 3 enrolls up to 45 participants with confirmed active AD to receive SYX-5219 or placebo daily for up to 42 days. This part is conducted at multiple global sites. Participants will undergo safety and exploratory efficacy assessments during treatment and follow-up periods. Researchers will monitor adverse events from the date of consent through various time points depending on the study part, including up to 10 days after dosing in Part 1 and up to 56 days in Part 3. Assessments include laboratory tests, vital signs, ECGs, and clinical evaluations to gather information on safety, tolerability, and drug levels in blood and urine throughout the study duration.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are studying oligodendrogliomas, a type of brain tumor identified by specific genetic changes such as IDH1 or IDH2 mutations and 1p/19q co-deletion. These tumors are classified as CNS WHO grade 2 or 3, and the study aims to determine the best treatment approach to improve survival while preserving brain function and quality of life. This phase 3 trial compares current standard treatments because existing data is unclear about the best timing and combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy for these tumors. The study compares two treatment approaches for adults with newly diagnosed grade 2 or 3 oligodendrogliomas. One group receives an initial chemotherapy regimen of lomustine and temozolomide (CETEG) with delayed radiotherapy plus PCV chemotherapy at progression. The other group receives standard radiotherapy followed by PCV chemotherapy. Radiotherapy doses vary based on tumor grade. The study plans to assess if delaying radiotherapy and adjusting chemotherapy can maintain survival while reducing side effects. Participants will undergo regular monitoring including MRI scans every three months, neurological assessments, quality of life questionnaires, and annual cognitive testing. Researchers will measure qualified overall survival, defined as survival without decline in function, cognition, or quality of life. The study will last up to 10 years, with close tracking of side effects, tumor response, and patients' well-being to determine the best balance of treatment effectiveness and quality of life.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness and safety of Xeomin injections in preventing chronic migraine. This Phase 3 clinical trial compares Xeomin to placebo injections given into muscles of the head and neck. Participants have chronic migraine diagnosed for at least 12 months and meet specific headache and migraine day criteria. The study aims to measure changes in monthly migraine days over time with Xeomin treatment. Participants will receive four treatments spaced about 12 weeks apart over a total study duration of 52 to 55 weeks. The treatments involve injections of either Xeomin or placebo solution prepared with sodium chloride. Visits occur approximately every 4 weeks, totaling 14 visits: the first, last, and four treatment visits are on-site, while the other eight visits are remote via phone or video call. During the study, participants will keep headache diaries to track migraine and headache days. Researchers will focus on the change in monthly migraine days from baseline to six months after the first injection. Safety and effectiveness are monitored throughout, with frequent assessments during both on-site and remote visits to ensure accurate tracking of migraine symptoms and any side effects.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the effect of Xeomin injections compared to placebo injections for preventing episodic migraine. This phase 3 clinical trial focuses on adults who experience episodic migraine, aiming to measure changes in the number of migraine days per month. Participants must have a diagnosis of episodic migraine for at least 12 months and meet specific headache frequency criteria. Participants will receive four treatments of either Xeomin or placebo injections into muscles of the head and neck, with treatments spaced about 12 weeks apart. The entire trial lasts approximately 52 to 55 weeks, beginning with a screening period of 4 to 5 weeks. There are about 14 visits in total, with the first, last, and four treatment visits conducted on-site, while the other visits are held remotely via phone or video. Throughout the study, participants will track their migraine days using a headache diary, and researchers will assess changes in monthly migraine frequency from baseline to six months after the first injection. Regular monitoring includes both in-person and remote assessments. The primary outcome focuses on the change in monthly migraine days between baseline and month six after treatment initiation.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are studying the dose-response effects of galvokimig compared with a placebo in adults with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis, a chronic skin condition lasting at least one year. The study focuses on adults aged 18 years and older who have significant disease activity as measured by specific clinical scores and a history of inadequate response to topical treatments or contraindications to them. This phase 2 trial aims to evaluate the safety, effectiveness, and how the drug behaves in the body. Participants will receive either galvokimig or a placebo as an injection. The study uses a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design with multiple doses tested in parallel groups. Treatments are given as solutions for injection, and the study monitors participants over a defined period to assess how the drug works and its safety profile. During the study, participants will undergo assessments including clinical scoring of their skin condition such as the Eczema Area and Severity Index at week 16 to measure response. Researchers will also monitor safety through physical exams, laboratory tests, and medical history reviews. The study requires stopping other systemic or topical treatments before starting and tracks participant adherence and outcomes carefully throughout the study duration.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of zorevunersen in patients with Dravet syndrome, a condition marked by reduced levels of the Nav1.1 protein due to mutations in the SCN1A gene. Zorevunersen is an investigational antisense oligonucleotide designed to increase the expression of the sodium channel Nav1.1 protein by boosting the production of its messenger RNA. This Phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study aims to assess the potential of zorevunersen for disease modification by measuring changes in major motor seizure frequency and other health outcomes. The study has two treatment periods. In Treatment Period 1, participants assigned to zorevunersen receive the drug by intrathecal administration on Day 1, Day 57, Day 169, and Day 281 with doses of 70 mg initially and then 45 mg later. The sham group undergoes a procedure mimicking drug administration without receiving the drug. In Treatment Period 2, those initially on zorevunersen receive 45 mg doses on Day 393, Day 477, and Day 589. Participants initially in the sham group are then given zorevunersen doses of 70 mg on Day 393 and Day 477, and 45 mg on Day 589. Participants will be closely monitored throughout the study with a primary focus on seizure changes measured at Week 28. Secondary assessments include behavior, cognition, clinical status, and quality of life. The study includes an initial 8-week baseline period and a 6-week observation period to confirm seizure frequency and stability of other treatments. Patients may continue to an open-label extension study to receive zorevunersen if eligible. The study involves children aged 2 to under 18 years and tracks safety and tolerability alongside efficacy outcomes.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are investigating a new immunotherapy treatment called CC-38, which is an autologous TIL-based ATIMP, in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer or metastatic prostate cancer. This trial is the first time this treatment is being studied in humans, focusing on its safety, tolerability, and how feasible repeated administrations are. The study aims to explore whether repeated dosing of expanded tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) can lead to longer persistence of these immune cells in the bloodstream, potentially improving their ability to infiltrate tumors. The treatment includes the investigational drug CC-38, which is made from the patient's own TILs expanded in the lab. Participants also receive other drugs such as pembrolizumab, cyclophosphamide, interleukin-2, and uromitexan as part of the therapy regimen. The trial is open-label and covers phases I and IIa. Patients undergo tumor tissue harvesting for TIL expansion before receiving repeated administrations of the CC-38 product. The study evaluates repeated dosing feasibility over a period of 42 months. Participants will be closely monitored throughout the study with regular assessments including radiologic imaging to confirm disease progression, pathological evaluations of tumor tissue, and laboratory tests to monitor organ functions. The main outcome measured is the safety, tolerability, and feasibility of repeated CC-38 administrations. The total participation duration is up to 42 months, during which patients will be observed for treatment effects, adverse events, and overall health status.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the safety and effectiveness of rilvegostomig compared to pembrolizumab, both combined with platinum-based doublet chemotherapy, as initial treatments for patients with metastatic non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC) whose tumors express PD-L1. This Phase III, randomized, double-blind, global study focuses on patients whose tumors meet the PD-L1 expression threshold of 1% or higher and do not have certain genetic mutations or rearrangements that would require other targeted therapies. Participants receive either rilvegostomig or pembrolizumab intravenously on the first day of each 21-day treatment cycle. Both groups also receive platinum-based chemotherapy drugs such as carboplatin or cisplatin, administered intravenously up to four cycles, along with pemetrexed given intravenously on Day 1 of each cycle. The study monitors these treatments as first-line therapy for metastatic non-squamous NSCLC. During the study, participants undergo regular assessments including imaging scans to measure tumor size and response, as well as evaluations of organ and bone marrow function. Researchers track overall survival and progression-free survival for up to approximately five years. Safety is closely monitored throughout, and patients are followed long-term to assess outcomes related to treatment effectiveness and tolerability.
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