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.
With CAR T-cell therapy, some of a patient's own T cells (a type of white blood cell) are removed and genetically modified in a laboratory to recognize their own cancer cells. The modified T cells, known as CAR T cells, are then returned to the patient to find and kill cancer cells throughout the body. This approach is a form of immunotherapy.
Researchers are doing this study to see how well COM701 immunotherapy works when used as maintenance therapy for ovarian cancer. Maintenance therapy helps keep cancer from growing again after it shrank or stopped growing following earlier treatment.
Researchers want to see if combining etentamig (ABBV-383) with iberdomide is a safe treatment for multiple myeloma. The people in this study have multiple myeloma that came back or keeps growing after treatment. The researchers will assess different doses of these drugs to find the best dose for patients.
The goal of this study is to find the best dose of lenalidomide that can be given together with the usual combination chemotherapy in adults with HTLV-associated T-cell leukemia-lymphoma. The usual chemotherapy consists of the drugs etoposide, prednisone, vincristine sulfate (Oncovin), cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin hydrochloride (hydroxydaunorubicin hydrochloride) and is known as EPOCH. Lenalidomide may help shrink or slow the growth of adult T-cell leukemia-lymphoma.
Researchers want to find the best dose of REM-422 to use in people with advanced adenoid cystic cancer (ACC). ACC most commonly starts in the salivary glands. The people in this study have ACC that has spread and may high levels of a protein called MYB. This protein can cause cancer cells to grow.
In this study, researchers are comparing the effectiveness bevacizumab plus osimertinib versus osimertinib alone as initial treatment for patients with stage IIIB-IV non-small cell lung cancer that contains a mutation in a gene called EGFR.
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.
Prostate cancers initially need the male hormone testosterone for growth. Hormone therapies that lower the level of testosterone are among the best treatments for prostate cancers that have metastasized (spread). The benefits of hormone treatments often do not last, however. Over time, many prostate cancers keep growing even with hormonal therapies. These are called castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPC).
In this study, researchers are finding the highest dose of MQ710 to use safely in people with certain types of advanced cancer. The people in this study have solid tumors that came back or grew even after treatment. In a later part of the study, the researchers will assess MQ710 plus another drug called pembrolizumab.