The study is a Phase 1 Open-label Two-stage, Safety and Tolerability Study with Cancer Type-specific Cohorts, Evaluating Subcutaneous Administration of Andes-1537 for Injection in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors that are Refractory to Standard Therapy or For Which No Standard Therapy Is Available. Patients with unresectable solid tumors that are refractory or have failed standard therapy and are deemed non-eligible or intolerant to further therapy or for which no standard therapy is available will be included in 5 cancer type-specific parallel cohorts. The following tumor types will be evaluated for potential inclusion in each cancer type-specific cohort: gallbladder & biliary tract carcinoma; cervical carcinoma; gastric carcinoma; pancreatic carcinoma, and colorectal carcinoma.
The purpose with this study is to evaluate treatment with radio chemotherapy (oxaliplatin and capecitabine) given concommitant with radiotherapy in patients with gastrointestinal tumors. The trial consists ot two separate studies; CORGI-U in patients with stomach- bile ducts- gallbladder and pancreas cancer, and CORGI-L in patients with colorectal cancer.
CORGI-U will be designed as a phase-I-II-study,in which the first part will be a chemotherapy dose finding study, followed by a phase II part to establish response rates. All subjects receives radiotherapy concommitant.
CORGI-L is a phase II trial, in which patients are treated with chemotherapy at fixed doses with radiotherapy concommitant.
The primary purpose of this study is to assess whether Acelarin (NUC-1031) is superior to gemcitabine in terms of overall survival for treatment of patients with metastatic pancreatic carcinoma. In addition disease progression, quality of life and comparative safety will be evaluated. Secondary objectives are to compare between the two treatment groups the following:
* Progression Free Survival (PFS)
* Radiological Response and disease control rate
* Toxicity and safety
* Quality of Life
Additional, exploratory objectives are to discover and validate possible biomarkers to predict additional benefit of Acelarin (NUC-1031) over gemcitabine alone.
This phase II trial studies how well atezolizumab and bevacizumab work in treating patients with rare solid tumors. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as atezolizumab and bevacizumab, may help the body's immune system attack the cancer, and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread.
This study was designed to test the hypothesis that more extensive nodal and soft-tissue clearance in patients with adenocarcinoma of the head of the pancreas would improve survival without an increase in morbidity and mortality.
This proposed Phase I clinical trial of SON-DP is an FIH, open-label, Phase Ia/Ib dose escalation and expansion study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, and PD of SON-DP in participants with relapsed/refractory/intolerant to standard of care therapies, for advanced/ metastatic solid tumors.
Pancreatic fistula is one of the most serious complication after pancreatoduodenectomy. To reduce pancreatic fistula, many authors recommend different techniques in pancreatojejunostomy. The purpose of this study is to determine which is the best method in preventing pancreatic fistula by enforce pancreaticojejunostomy with tissue glue and to investigate its long term clinical outcomes.
This is a prospective, single-arm, phase II study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of irinotecan liposome II in combination with oxaliplatin and 5-FU/LV in perioperative treatment of borderline resectable pancreatic cancer in 45 patients.
The purpose of this study is to determine if TH-302, in combination with A) Gemcitabine, or B) Docetaxel or C) Pemetrexed methotrexate, are safe and effective in the treatment of Pancreatic Cancer, Castrate-resistant Prostate Cancer, and Non-small Cell Lung Cancer, respectively.
This is a Phase I open labelled study to treat patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer with combination therapy using standard of care first line therapy with gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel given days 1, 8, and 15 every 28 days, and proglumide. This is a phase 1 study with 3+3 design, enrolling3-12 patients over 2 planned dose levels of proglumide(maximum 6 patients per dose level). Proglumide will be tested at the daily dose of 1200 mg orally (PO) given as 400mg three times daily (TID) (dose level 1) or 1600 mg orally(PO) given as 800 mg twice a day (BID) (dose level 2). All cycles are 28 days. Patients will be monitored for safety and toxicity by laboratory blood testing and physical examinations.