At any time Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center is conducting hundreds of clinical trials to improve care for many types of cancer. Use the tool below to browse our clinical trials that are currently enrolling new patients. Each listing explains the purpose of the trial, the trial’s eligibility criteria, and how to get more information.
The list below includes clinical trials for adult cancers. Please visit our pediatric cancer care section to find a pediatric clinical trial.
Memorial Sloan Kettering offers language assistance services for those who prefer to receive health information in another language. Learn more about our language assistance program here.
Displaying 11–20 of 584 results.
-
Researchers are assessing MEDI5752 and AZD2936 with standard treatments in people with cancer. The people in this study have primary liver or biliary cancer, including biliary tract or gallbladder cancer, that spread or cannot be surgically removed (inoperable). In addition, they have not yet received treatment for the cancer.
-
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of the drug mosunetuzumab for people with follicular lymphoma who have not yet received treatment. Mosunetuzumab binds to a cancer cell and a T cell (which plays a key role in the immune system) at the same time. Researchers think that mosunetuzumab may strengthen the immune system's ability to fight cancer cells by activating a patient's own cells to destroy the tumor. Mosunetuzumab is given as a subcutaneous (under the skin) injection.
-
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of cesium-131 (Cs-131) brachytherapy in patients with brain cancer that has come back after prior radiation therapy and who will be having surgery to remove it. Brachytherapy involves the placement of radioactive seeds into the brain during surgery. The seeds remain in place permanently in the area where the tumor was removed and give off cancer-killing radiation temporarily. 
-
The purpose of this study is to find the highest dose of the investigational drug AVA6000 that can be given safely in people with advanced solid tumors that are not responding to treatment. AVA6000 is very similar to a standard chemotherapy drug called doxorubicin. Like doxorubicin, AVA6000 works to slow or stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking an enzyme. Unlike doxorubicin, however, AVA6000 is a "prodrug," meaning it remains inactive until it reaches the site of the cancer. Because of the way AVA6000 works, it may be useful for treating cancer with fewer side effects than doxorubicin. AVA6000 is given intravenously (by vein).
-
Researchers want to find the best dose of BMS-986393 to use with other drugs to treat multiple myeloma. The people in this study have multiple myeloma that keeps growing or came back after treatment.
-
Researchers are finding the best dose of ASP2138 to use in people with advanced digestive cancers. The people in this study have cancer of the pancreas, stomach (gastric cancer), or junction between the esophagus and stomach (gastroesophageal junction cancer). In addition, their cancers make a protein called CLDN 18.2 and keep growing even after treatment.
-
Researchers want to see if the drug talquetamab is useful for treating multiple myeloma. The people in this study have multiple myeloma that keeps growing even after treatment. They also recently received a CAR T cell therapy called idecabtagene autoleucel.
-
Researchers want to see how well tivozanib plus pembrolizumab works in people with kidney cancer. The people in this study had surgery for renal cell carcinoma and have a high risk of it coming back.
-
The standard treatment for poor-risk and intermediate-risk germ cell tumors (GCTs), such as testicular cancer, is chemotherapy with the drugs bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin (abbreviated BEP) given every three weeks. In this study, researchers want to see if giving BEP chemotherapy every two weeks is more effective for controlling tumor growth than the standard regimen in patients with metastatic intermediate-risk and poor-risk GCTs.
-
The usual approach to managing HPV-related oropharynx cancer in people whose tumors have a higher risk of coming back after surgery is to use radiation therapy to prevent tumor relapse. However, not all patients have tumors that come back after surgery, and many may not need radiation therapy at all, or only need it later when there are early signs of the cancer coming back.