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Found 33 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating the effects of cannabis and cannabinoid use on cancer-related symptoms in adults newly diagnosed with breast, colorectal, melanoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, or non-small cell lung cancer. This study focuses on patients who are planning to receive or have recently started systemic cancer treatments such as chemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) targeting PD-1, PD-L1, or CTLA-4. The goal is to understand how cannabis use may be associated with symptom changes over time. Participants are enrolled in a non-interventional study where no experimental treatment is given. They complete surveys about their symptoms and cannabis use, and their medical records are reviewed regularly. The study tracks cancer-related symptoms monthly for up to 12 months after enrollment, allowing researchers to observe symptom patterns during ongoing cancer treatment. An optional substudy is available at select sites for patients with non-small cell lung cancer receiving paclitaxel and ICIs. During the study, participants complete online surveys in English or Spanish at their convenience, either at home or in clinic. Medical records are examined to gather information on treatments and health status. The main outcome measured is cancer-related symptoms, assessed monthly for one year. Safety monitoring includes ensuring participants have an expected life expectancy of at least six months and are not enrolled in hospice. The study aims to enroll 2000 patients across multiple sites in the United States.
Actively Recruiting
This research evaluates the combination of two drugs, cabozantinib and nivolumab, in treating patients with advanced melanoma or squamous cell cancers of the head and neck that have spread locally or to distant parts of the body. The study focuses on how well patients can be grouped based on specific tumor biomarkers called tumor mutational burden and tumor inflammation signature. It also aims to understand if this drug combination can shrink or stabilize tumors and how responses vary with biomarker status. This is a phase II trial assessing both the feasibility of biomarker-based patient grouping and the treatment's overall response rate. Participants receive nivolumab intravenously once every 28-day cycle and take cabozantinib orally every day for up to two years unless the disease worsens or side effects become unacceptable. The study includes two stages focusing on molecular characterization and treatment efficacy. Patients undergo tumor biopsies at screening and optionally during follow-up, along with regular imaging scans like CT or MRI and blood sample collections throughout the study. During the trial, patients are closely monitored through scans, blood tests, and biopsies to track tumor response and safety. After treatment ends, follow-up visits occur every 12 weeks for one year and then every six months for up to three years. Key outcomes include the time to get biomarker results within 21 days and the overall tumor response rate at the end of the first stage. The study also assesses disease control, progression-free survival, overall survival, and safety of the drug combination in relation to tumor biomarkers.
Actively Recruiting
The goal of this trial is to determine the efficacy of advanced cognitive training for cancer survivors suffering from cancer- and cancer-treatment-related cognitive dysfunction. For millions of cancer survivors, cognitive dysfunction is a prevalent, severe, and persistent problem that has long been associated with poor work-related and health-related outcomes. Evidence suggests that a significant subset of breast cancer survivors (BCS) incur cognitive changes that may persist for years after treatment. Unfortunately, the scientific basis for managing these cognitive changes is extremely limited. Available evidence from pilot studies, including our work, suggests that advanced cognitive training, which is based on the principles of neuroplasticity (ability of brain neurons to re-organize and form new neural networks), may be a viable treatment option. However, previous trials to date have been limited by lack of attention-controlled designs, small samples of BCS, or limited outcome measures. Therefore, to overcome limitations of past studies and build on our pilot results, the purpose of this 2-group, double-blind, randomized controlled trial is to conduct a full-scale efficacy trial to compare advanced cognitive training to attention control in BCS.
Actively Recruiting
Healthy Volunteer
Researchers are collecting blood and tissue samples from people with and without cancer to study and evaluate tests that could help detect cancer early. The goal is to create a blinded reference set of samples to validate blood-based tests for early detection of multiple types of cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma, breast, lung, and others. The study also aims to assess how well these tests perform at the time of initial cancer diagnosis, considering different tumor types and cancer stages. Participants complete a baseline questionnaire and provide blood samples at registration and again 12 months later. Those diagnosed with cancer may also provide tissue samples at these times. The study includes patients aged 40 to 75 years, with cancer diagnoses at various stages or individuals without cancer. Special procedures are in place for patients with high suspicion of certain cancers before confirmation. During the study, researchers collect detailed information through questionnaires, blood draws, and tissue sampling to analyze test accuracy. Participants are monitored for up to one year after registration to follow outcomes. The primary measure is providing this blinded set of blood samples to help validate future cancer detection tests, supporting research that could improve early diagnosis and treatment.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating how to best recommend chemotherapy for patients with colon cancer after surgery by using the presence or absence of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in the blood. This approach aims to identify microscopic residual tumor cells and may provide better risk prediction for cancer recurrence compared to traditional methods. The trial focuses on patients with Stage IIB, IIC, or III colon cancer who have undergone complete tumor removal. Participants will have their tumor tissue and blood tested centrally using the Signatera assay to determine ctDNA status. Patients without detectable ctDNA may avoid chemotherapy, while those with detectable ctDNA are considered at higher risk and will be randomly assigned to receive different chemotherapy regimens, including mFOLFOX6, CAPOX, or mFOLFIRINOX, given intravenously or orally over periods ranging from 3 to 6 months. The study includes initial screening, treatment, and possible second randomization for patients whose ctDNA status changes during monitoring. During the study, participants will undergo various assessments including blood tests, imaging scans, and performance evaluations to monitor their health and response to therapy. Researchers will track the time to ctDNA positivity and disease-free survival for up to 3 and 5 years, respectively. Safety and treatment effects will be closely observed throughout the study duration, ensuring thorough follow-up and monitoring for all participants.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating three different combinations of drugs to treat newly diagnosed multiple myeloma in patients who are considered frail or intermediate-fit and are not eligible for stem cell transplant. This phase III trial focuses on comparing these three-drug induction treatments followed by either double- or single-drug maintenance therapy. The study aims to determine which treatment combination better controls the disease and improves progression-free survival and overall survival. Patients are randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups. Arm 1 (VRd-Lite) receives bortezomib by injection under the skin, lenalidomide by mouth, and dexamethasone by mouth during induction cycles, followed by lenalidomide alone for maintenance. Arm 2 (DRd-R) receives daratumumab and hyaluronidase-fihj injections, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone during induction, followed by lenalidomide alone during maintenance. Arm 3 (DRd-DR) receives the same induction as Arm 2, but maintenance includes both daratumumab and lenalidomide. Induction cycles last up to 9 cycles of 28 days each, and maintenance cycles continue every 28 days if the disease does not progress or toxicity occurs. Participants undergo assessments including tumor evaluations, whole-body imaging, blood tests, and quality-of-life questionnaires. After completing treatment, patients are followed every 3 months for 1 year, every 6 months for 2 years, and then annually for up to 10 years. Researchers will measure progression-free survival, overall survival, response rates, safety, minimal residual disease, and patient-reported health outcomes to understand the treatments' effects and support future care decisions.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are investigating whether adding the chemotherapy drug Docetaxel to the usual hormone treatments can better control metastatic castration sensitive prostate cancer (mCSPC) in patients who have a less than optimal PSA response after 6 to 12 months of androgen-targeting therapy. This phase III, open-label, randomized international trial compares the effectiveness of Docetaxel combined with standard Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) and Androgen-Receptor Pathway Inhibitors (ARPI) versus ADT and ARPI alone. The study focuses on men with metastatic prostate adenocarcinoma who have a suboptimal PSA decline following initial hormone therapy. Participants receive standard ADT and an ARPI such as abiraterone, enzalutamide, apalutamide, or darolutamide, which are assigned before enrollment. At enrollment, patients are randomized to receive either the addition of Docetaxel chemotherapy or no chemotherapy alongside their hormone therapy. The goal is to assess whether this combination reduces cancer growth or spread compared to hormone therapy alone. Treatment begins within five working days after enrollment, with close monitoring throughout the study. Throughout the trial, participants undergo regular assessments including PSA measurements to monitor cancer activity and overall survival tracked at 39 months. Eligibility requires stable organ function, performance status, and recovery from prior treatment side effects. Patients are monitored for adverse events, safety, and treatment response. The study also ensures participants and their partners use contraception if of childbearing potential, and participants must be accessible for treatment and follow-up visits to document outcomes and safety data.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are studying hair loss caused by endocrine therapy in women with breast cancer, including both postmenopausal and premenopausal patients. Hair loss is a distressing side effect often linked to chemotherapy, but it also occurs with endocrine therapy, although it is not well understood or frequently reported. The study aims to better understand how often hair loss happens, its timing, duration, and severity among different types of endocrine therapy. The study observes five groups of women: those receiving tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors, aromatase inhibitors combined with CDK4/6 inhibitors, those not receiving endocrine therapy, and a previously enrolled group of premenopausal women on endocrine therapy. Participants complete questionnaires and surveys about their hair loss symptoms, and their medical records are reviewed. The groups will close enrollment once 30 patients each have been included. Participants are asked to fill out questionnaires every three months, starting within two weeks of beginning their endocrine therapy or CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment. Researchers track patient-reported hair loss and its impact on quality of life over up to two years. The study evaluates the incidence, characteristics, severity, and risk of treatment-related hair loss throughout this period.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating if adding adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) to ovarian function suppression (OFS) plus endocrine therapy (ET) improves invasive breast cancer-free survival (IBCFS) compared to OFS plus ET alone. This Phase III trial focuses on premenopausal women with early-stage breast cancer that is estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, HER2-negative, and has a 21-gene recurrence score between 16-25 for node-negative patients or 0-25 for patients with 1-3 positive nodes. The study addresses the need for better treatment options for younger women diagnosed with this type of breast cancer, as younger age is linked to worse outcomes despite standard therapies. Participants receive one of two treatments: either OFS combined with an aromatase inhibitor (AI) for five years or adjuvant chemotherapy followed by the same OFS plus AI regimen. The specific AI and GnRH agonist used, along with their dosing schedules, are chosen by the investigator, commonly including goserelin, leuprolide, or triptorelin administered monthly or every three months. Bilateral oophorectomy may be used instead of ovarian suppression if preferred. Endocrine therapy beyond five years is at the investigator's discretion. During the trial, participants will be closely monitored for invasive breast cancer-free survival over an 11-year period from randomization. Assessments include clinical evaluations, hormone receptor testing, tumor staging, and genetic recurrence scoring prior to enrollment. Safety and effectiveness data will be collected throughout the study, with particular attention to treatment side effects and long-term outcomes. The trial involves detailed eligibility screening and ongoing follow-up to ensure accurate measurement of the study's primary outcome.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are studying how social and genetic factors affect outcomes for adolescent and young adult (AYA) survivors of Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Compared to children and older adults, AYAs with these cancers face unique biological, clinical, psychological, and social challenges that influence their risk of illness and early death after treatment. By collecting blood samples and detailed health and treatment information, the study aims to better understand these risks and improve support for AYA cancer survivors. Participants in this observational study provide blood samples and complete health-related quality of life questionnaires at the start of the study and again at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. The study examines how social-environmental risk factors and individual resilience relate to disease-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life. It also explores how gene expression changes may mediate these effects and whether factors like race, sex, gender identity, and geography influence outcomes. Throughout the two-year period, researchers monitor participants for disease-free survival, overall survival, and comorbidities including symptoms and late effects. The study collects repeated assessments through questionnaires and blood draws to track health status, quality of life, and biological markers. This comprehensive approach helps identify factors that impact long-term health for adolescent and young adult lymphoma survivors.
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