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Active clinical trials for "Head and Neck Neoplasms"

Results 471-480 of 1835

A Study of DBPR112 in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer and EGFR Mutated Lung Cancer

Head and Neck CancerNSCLC

The study is being performed to assess the MTD, pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, tolerability and preliminary antitumor activity of DBPR112 in patients with head and neck cancer and EGFR mutated lung cancer.

Terminated34 enrollment criteria

Study Comparing Pembrolizumab With Methotrexate in Elderly, Frail or Cisplatin-ineligible Patients...

Cancer of Head and Neck

The study is designed as an open-label, randomized, prospective, multicenter, phase II study comparing pembrolizumab with methotrexate in elderly, frail or cisplatin-ineligible patients with squamous carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC)

Terminated46 enrollment criteria

A Study of Nivolumab in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer.

Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck; Head and Neck Cancer; Head and Neck Carcinoma; Cancer of the Head and Neck

A prospective real world evidence study of Nivolumab use in France in patient with recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the Head and Neck progressing on or after a platinum based therapy

Active6 enrollment criteria

Paclitaxel vs Paclitaxel + Cetuximab in Recurrent - Metastatic Head & Neck Carcinoma After Failure...

Head and Neck Cancer

Treatment of recurrent and/or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) after progression to first line EXTREME-type treatment in patients undergoing maintenance treatment with cetuximab.

Terminated39 enrollment criteria

Decitabine Treatment in HPV-Induced Anogenital and Head and Neck Cancer Patients After Radiotherapy...

Head and Neck CancerAnogenital Cancer

Open-label, single-center phase I study to evaluate first signs of efficacy and to confirm the safety and tolerability of a decitabine safe-dose treatment in two strata of patients with HPV induced anogenital and head and neck cancers (Stratum 1: patients with high rist for disease recurrence; Stratum 2: patients with failure of standard therapy). The study is expected to enroll 18 patients overall (9 patients in each stratum). The duration of the trial for each patient is expected to be 6 months (two 28 day cycles of study treatment plus four months of additional follow-up). The overall duration of the trial is expected to be approximately 42 months.

Terminated30 enrollment criteria

Endoscopic Injection of Mitomycin C for the Treatment of Pharyngoesophageal Stenosis

Esophageal StenosisDeglutition Disorders2 more

Management of pharyngoesophageal stenosis (PES) in patients after head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment remains a challenge. There are some cases of strictures refractory to dilation sessions. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of Mitomycin C (MMC) endoscopic injection for the treatment of refractory pharyngoesophageal stenosis. Patients and methods: This is a prospective study in patients with dysphagia following head and neck cancer treatment, without evidence suggestive of tumor recurrence, and refractory to endoscopic treatment. Theses undergo endoscopic dilation of the stenotic segment with thermoplastic bougies, followed by the injection of MMC.

Terminated4 enrollment criteria

Epacadostat and Pembrolizumab in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer That Have Failed Prior Immunotherapy...

Head and Neck Squamous Cell CarcinomaHead and Neck Cancer

Study to determine response rate of the combination of pembrolizumab plus epacadostat in patients with head and neck cancers that have received prior immunotherapy.

Terminated41 enrollment criteria

BEMPEG With Pembrolizumab vs Pembrolizumab Alone in Patients With Metastatic or Recurrent HNSCC...

Metastatic Head and Neck CancerRecurrent Head and Neck Cancer

This is a multicenter, randomized, open-label, Phase 2/3 study that will evaluate the efficacy and safety of bempegaldesleukin (BEMPEG; NKTR-214) combined with pembrolizumab compared with pembrolizumab monotherapy in patients with recurrent or metastatic HNSCC with positive PD-L1 expression (CPS ≥ 1).

Terminated23 enrollment criteria

Cetuximab Compared to Mitomycin-C and 5-Fluorouracil for Locally Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinomas...

Head and Neck Neoplasms

Concomitant radio-chemotherapy has become a standard therapy for advanced squamous cell carcinomas of head and neck. Local side effects caused by chemotherapy, like mucositis, increase in combination with radiotherapy. Mucositis, as a painful inflammation and ulceration of the oral mucosa, limits patient´s treatment plan. Studies showed that one third of the patients discontinued Chemotherapy because of the side effects. Accordingly to these side effects, patients eating habits get limited. This requires an increase of pain medication, mostly an opioid derivate, which causes side effects too, which requires other symptomatic medication. This requires a change of nutrition from hard to pappy food and at further impairing, liquid food is needed. A central vein catheter has to be done for parental nutrition and a gastrostomy for enteral nutrition, which means risk of haemorrhage and increased risk of bacteraemias and sepsis for the patient. This would mean a decrease of general condition and a dose reduction or treatment stop is needed. Accordingly, the results are treatment delay and prolongation of hospital stay. Risk of the study will be the known side effects of the products: Mitomycin-C, 5-Fluorouracile, Cetuximab and radiation therapy. These are listed in the particular product description and the description of radiation thera-py. Another risk would be that the primary objective cannot be fulfilled. So the patients would have a lower quality of life than expected. Following benefits are expected. Benefit for patient: Decrease of mucositis and side effects caused by mucositis, also xerostomia, taste disturbances, dietary restrictions, dysphagia Decrease of pain medication and side effects caused by pain medication Decrease of surgical intervention (gastric tube, central venous catheter) and risks caused by the interventions (sepsis, bacteraemia, bleeding, injury of heart and stomach, etc.) Improving of patients social functioning, social eating, social contact No interruptions of therapy Increase of life quality Weight stabilization Benefit for clinical practice: Increase of compliance Fulfilling of complete therapy Hospital stays as planned

Terminated35 enrollment criteria

Ponatinib for Squamous Cell Lung and Head and Neck Cancers

Non-Small Cell Lung CancerHead and Neck Cancer

This research study is a Phase II clinical trial, which tests the safety and effectiveness of an investigational drug to learn whether the drug works in treating a specific cancer. "Investigational" means that the drug is being studied. It also means that the FDA has not yet approved ponatinib for use in patients, including people with your type of cancer. In order to participate on this study, it must first be determined whether or not a patient's lung or head and neck squamous cell cancer (SCC) has an alteration in FGFR kinase is made from an experimental test on your squamous cell cancer tissue sample. This experimental test is a "genetic test" or "genotyping test", which is a method used to study a tumor's genes. The results are for research purposes only and are not considered "genetic testing" for the purpose of diagnosing medical conditions. Cancers develop as a result of changes that occur in human genetic material (DNA); these changes are called mutations or alterations. This experimental test gives no information about any of the genes in the normal cells of the patient's body, but it helps identify abnormal genes (like FGFR kinase mutations or alterations) usually found only in cancer cells. We will use this experimental test to determine whether or not a tumor contains a required alteration/mutation and thus may respond to ponatinib. Ponatinib is an investigational, oral anti-cancer drug designed to inhibit abnormal proteins found in cancer cells and may cause those cancer cells to die. In laboratory testing, ponatinib has been shown to inhibit a family of proteins called FGFR kinases, and this genetic alteration/mutation has been found in some squamous cell lung cancers. There is laboratory evidence that alterations/mutations in FGFR kinases in squamous cell lung cancers may be driving the growth of these tumors and that inhibiting these FGFR kinases with ponatinib may decrease or stop the growth of lung SCC. In this research study, we are looking to see if the study drug, ponatinib, can keep cancer from growing.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria
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