Thoracic surgeon Daniela Molena leads clinical trials to improve outcomes for people with esophageal cancers.
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.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of combining three drugs to treat people with an IDH-mutant glioma that came back after chemotherapy or surgery. The three medications are pembrolizumab, olaparib, and temozolomide. 
To learn more about the purpose of this study and to find out who can join, please click here to visit ClinicalTrials.gov for a full clinical trial description.
To learn more about the purpose of this study and to find out who can join, please click here to visit ClinicalTrials.gov for a full clinical trial description.
Researchers want to find the best dose of Debio 0123 that can be given with temozolomide to treat glioblastoma. Glioblastoma is a type of brain cancer. The people in this study have glioblastoma that keeps growing even after treatment.
Mesonephric cancer is a rare gynecologic cancer. The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of giving VS-6766 and defactinib together in people with advanced or recurrent mesonephric gynecologic cancers.
Limited metastatic colorectal cancer is cancer that has spread to no more than 4 parts of the body. The usual treatment for limited metastatic colorectal cancer is chemotherapy. In this study, researchers want to see if adding local therapies makes treatment work better. Local therapies are used to treat cancer only at specific sites.
Researchers want to find the best dose of TNG456 to use alone or with abemaciclib to treat brain cancer. The people in this study have glioblastoma that has spread. In addition, their cancer is missing a protein called MTAP.
Researchers want to see how well cabozantinib works to treat meningioma, a type of brain tumor. The people in this study have meningiomas that came back or keep growing even after treatment.
Glioblastomas that have an "unmethylated" MGMT gene are less likely to respond to the standard chemotherapy drug temozolomide. In this study, researchers are comparing three investigational treatments (abemaciclib, CC-115, and neratinib) with the standard treatment (temozolomide and radiation therapy) in patients newly diagnosed with glioblastoma.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of adding the drug evexomostat (SDX-7320) to standard eribulin chemotherapy in people with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) that has come back or spread despite treatment. In addition, the participants in this study have metabolic disorders such as high blood sugar and/or obesity. TNBC includes breast cancers that do not contain receptors for estrogen or progesterone and do not have the HER2 protein, so they cannot be treated with medications that target those proteins.