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Found 15 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
RECRUITING
This non-interventional study aims to provide information on real-world effectiveness, safety and tolerability, management of adverse events, QoL and patient compliance of patients with HR+/HER2- early breast cancer at high risk of recurrence treated with ribociclib in combination with an aromatase inhibitor (AI) ± luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) with curative intent according to the current effective local summary of product characteristics. In order to put the results of patients treated with ribociclib into perspective, socio-economic data, data on QoL and patient compliance will also be collected from patients treated with abemaciclib + endocrine therapy (ET) ± LHRH as described in the current effective local summary of product characteristics. To understand reasons for treatment decision, and to analyze the clinical adoption of ribociclib + AI ± LHRH after EU approval over time, baseline data will be collected from cohorts of ribociclib + AI ± LHRH, abemaciclib + ET ± LHRH, and additionally from patients treated with ET monotherapy ± LHRH and analyzed cross-sectionally. The study is planned to be rolled out into a broad set of German and Austrian breast centers and gynecological practices to describe clinical routine in a representative subset of the local healthcare eco-system. It will gather insights into the potential benefits and risks associated with ribociclib + AI ± LHRH in the adjuvant treatment of HR+/HER2- eBC patients at high risk of recurrence. This knowledge will inform about clinical decision-making and contribute to improved patient outcomes in routine practice.
RECRUITING
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RECRUITING
Acute myeloid leukemia is a malignancy that is still fatal for the majority of patients. Besides age, the genetic configuration of AML blasts is one of the strongest prognostic factors. Patients with mutations in the core-binding factor (CBF) genes have the best prognosis, however a considerable proportion of 35-60% will eventually relapse. Mutation and overexpression of receptor tyrosinkinases (RTK) have been proposed as main reasons for relapse development or chemoresistance in CBF AMLs. RTKs like stem cell factor receptor (c-KIT) and FLT3 are of high clinical relevance as they mediate proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells. There is evidence that c-Kit mutations and high levels of c-KIT in CBF-AML have adverse effects on survival endpoints indicating c-KIT as potential therapeutic target in this special AML population. Midostaurin can be considered a potent c-KIT inhibitor besides having multi-kinase inhibitory activity for several other kinases of documented or potential pathogenetic relevance for AML, most importantly mutated FLT3. The kinase inhibition ultimately leads to inhibition of proliferation, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. Previous studies with other c-KIT inhibitors such as dasatinib showed promising results with respect to survival end points in newly diagnosed CBF AML patients. Midostaurin is considered a more potent c-KIT inhibitor than dasatinib and may be able to potentiate the inhibitory effect on leukemic cell growth. Another important therapeutical target in CBF AML is the sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin (CD33) which is expressed on the majority of AML blasts. Gemtuzumab Ozogamicin (GO) is a therapeutic CD33 antibody linked to a strong cytostatic drug (calicheamicin) which causes apoptosis of cancer cells upon internalization. For the combination of GO and standard intensive chemotherapy, metaanalyses of randomized trials have shown that i) a low-dose fractionated administration results in the best tolerability, and ii) among AML subgroups, patients with CBF AML have the greatest benefit from GO in addition to standard therapy. Subgroup analyses within the ALFA-0701 (A Randomized Study of Gemtuzumab Ozogamicin With Daunorubicine and Cytarabine in Untreated Acute Myeloid Leukemia Aged of 50-70 Years Old) trial population showing beneficial effects of GO on overall survival, relapse-free survival and event-free survival in patients positive for FLT3 mutation as compared to those negative for FLT3 mutation. Subgroup analyses of the GO registration trial ALFA-0701 showed a significant clinical benefit of the patients displaying a mutation in the FLT3 gene compared to those without this mutation. In Addition, CBF AML patients with FLT3 mutations expressed particularly high levels of CD33 antigen and that CD33 antigen levels were positively correlated to the improved survival after GO treatment. Furthermore, recently published data of two paediatric populations with internal tandem mutation in the FLT3 gene showed reduced relapse rates in GO recipients compared to the control group only receiving standard chemotherapy. These results suggest that GO is a particularly beneficiary agent in FLT3 mutated patients who would currently receive midostaurin in addition to intensive chemotherapy as a standard of care. Hence, from a clinical point of view there is an unambiguous rationale supporting the combination of midostaurin and GO for treatment of AML in the two cytogenetic subgroups: CBF AML and FLT3 mutated AML. GO has become the new treatment standard for patients with CBF AML. The hypothesized positive effect of midostaurin is likely but randomized proof is laking. Midostaurin has become the new treatment standard for AML patients with mutations in the FLT3 gene. The positive effect of GO is shown in a post-hoc subgroup analysis of the ALFA-0701 trial, but prospective randomized proof is lacking. Therefore, the proposed trial intends i) to explore and establish the safe combination of GO plus midostaurin (MODULE) and ii) to evaluate the effect of midostaurin versus no midostaurin added to standard AML chemotherapy plus GO in CBF AML (MAGNOLIA) and iii) to evaluate the effect of GO versus no GO added to standard AML chemotherapy plus midostaurin in FLT3 mutated AML (MAGMA).
RECRUITING
This is a prospective, multicenter, phase IV, one-arm, open-label clinical trial investigating patients treated with ribociclib and standard of care endocrine therapy for hormone receptor positive (HR+) / human epidermal growth factor receptor negative (HER2-) advanced breast cancer in the first therapy line. Patients eligible for this trial will receive on-label ribociclib according to Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) and as well as the specified inclusion/exclusion criteria. The survival rates for progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) at month 12 are the co-primary objectives. Quality of life and toxicity are secondary objectives. Additionally, there is a comprehensive biomarker discovery and validation program included into the study. A total of 1000 patients are planned to be enrolled into this trial in 75 trial sites in Germany. Biomarkers will be evaluated before, during and after treatment or at progression. A comprehensive biospecimens sampling will be done to enable translational research projects and evaluation of potential biomarkers within circulation tumor desoxyribonucleic acid (ctDNA), circulating tumor ribonucleic acid (ctRNA), formaldehyde-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE) tissue, Serum, Plasma and circulating immune cells
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Prospective, multicenter, open label, randomized controlled clinical trial to compare the effects of an early catheter-directed treatment plus conventional care with conventional care in patients with high-risk pulmonary embolism
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Patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative advanced or metastatic breast cancer and gBRCA1/2 mutations have a low progression-free survival (PFS) and represent a patient population with a high unmet need, hence further treatment options should be explored to improve patient outcomes. Elacestrant is a novel, nonsteroidal, orally bioavailable estrogen receptor antagonist (SERD) that has shown efficacy in heavily pretreated patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, and in those with ESR1 mutations known to confer endocrine resistance, and has thus gained approval in 2023 by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for postmenopausal women or adult men with ER-positive, HER2-negative, ESR1-mutated advanced or metastatic breast cancer with disease progression following at least one line of ET. Olaparib is approved by the EMA for deleterious or suspected deleterious gBRCA-mutated, HER2-negative metastatic BC, based on positive outcomes in the phase III OlympiAD trial which showed improved median PFS, response rates, and less toxicity with olaparib compared to SOC. The purpose of the proposed study is to investigate if the addition of elacestrant to standard olaparib therapy could potentially lead to an improvement in PFS compared to olaparib alone in patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer with gBRCA1/2 mutations. ELEMENT is a phase II, prospective, multi-center, randomized, open label, parallel group study in patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer with gBRCA1/2 mutation, with 2:1 randomization into Arm A (olaparib + elacestrant) or arm B (olaparib). Treatment in either arm will be given until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, withdrawal of patient´s consent to study participation, or end of study.
RECRUITING
To register a large number of patients with the diagnosis of a BCR-ABL 1- negative myeloid neoplasm (according to WHO 2008 / 2016 classification) in participating centers To store samples from all patients (e.g. bone marrow aspirate, peripheral blood, plasma, and buccal swap, skin biopsy samples in exceptional cases) To perform morphologic and genetic analyses To assess clinical characteristics and outcome data using a defined catalogue containing clinically relevant variables To assess biological disease features and correlate with clinical outcome data (prognostic and predictive markers) To assess quality of life
RECRUITING
The GMALL registry serves the purpose of ALL research and quality assurance. The Registry collects data about diagnostics, treatment and outcome of Adult ALL Patients in the clinical routine, whether or not the patient is treated within a clinical trial.
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The standard of care for high-risk breast cancer consists of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and surgery followed by postoperative whole breast/chest wall irradiation+/- an additional boost (= irradiation restricted to the tumour bed in the case of breast-conserving therapy). In case of lymph node involvement in most patients require additional radiation of the regional lymph nodes. Adjuvant radiotherapy significantly reduces ipsilateral breast cancer recurrences, breast cancer specific mortality, and overall mortality. The optimal time of radiotherapy in patients, who are candidates for neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) has never been addressed in a randomised controlled trial. The Study Chairman of the NEORAD trial is Prof. Dr. med. Christiane Matuschek. The deputies of the Study Chairman are Prof. Dr. med. Wilfried Budach and Prof. Dr. med. Tanja Fehm.
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This is a multi-center, prospective, non-interventional study (NIS) to collect real-world clinical and PRO data in patients with primary advanced (FIGO stage III or IV) or recurrent EC receiving 1L CPD followed by maintenance therapy with durvalumab (DNA mismatch repair deficient; dMMR cohort) or durvalumab and olaparib (DNA mismatch repair proficient, pMMR cohort) in accordance with the applicable SmPC within routine clinical practice. Following surgery and/or radiation (if applicable) the decision to initiate 1L CPD followed by durvalumab or durvalumab and olaparib is made in a shared decision between the patient and the treating physician as part of routine care outside of and independent of this study. The aim of the NIS is to describe the outcomes including effectiveness, safety and PRO of patients with primary advanced and recurrent EC treated with the two approved 1L regimens of CPD followed by durvalumab maintenance and CPD followed by durvalumab and olaparib maintenance in Germany. The study also aims to better understand characteristics of patients with primary advanced or recurrent EC that benefit from maintenance therapy with durvalumab or durvalumab and olaparib.
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