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.
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Researchers are comparing AZD0901 with standard treatments in people with advanced gastric cancer. The people in this study have cancer of the stomach or the junction between the esophagus and stomach (gastroesophageal junction). The people in this study have cancers that make a protein called Claudin18.2 (CLDN18.2).
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Researchers are comparing IMA203 cellular therapy with standard treatment in people with melanoma of the skin. Their melanoma is inoperable (cannot be surgically removed) or metastatic (has spread) and keeps growing despite treatment.
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Researchers want to find the best dose of ODM-212 to treat advanced solid tumors. The people in this study have solid tumors that have spread and cannot be cured with standard therapies. Examples include:
- A Phase 2 Study of Tigilanol Tiglate in People With Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Full Title A Phase IIa Open Label Study Evaluating the Preliminary Efficacy of Intratumoural Tigilanol Tiglate in Advanced and/or Metastatic Soft Tissue Sarcoma of the Extremities and Body Wall
Purpose
In this study, researchers want to learn if tigilanol tiglate is safe and works well against advanced soft tissue sarcoma. When injected into a tumor, tigilanol tiglate stops the blood supply to the cancer, which starves the tumor of nutrients. It may also make the immune system target and kill cancer cells.
Who Can Join
To join this study, there are a few conditions. You must:
- Have soft tissue sarcoma of the arms, legs, or body wall (exterior of the body, as opposed to internal organs).
- Have sarcoma that has grown beyond its original location and is in a place where the tumor can be injected.
- Have completed prior treatment at least 4 weeks before getting tigilanol tiglate.
- Be able to walk and do routine activities for more than half the time you are awake.
- Be age 18 or older.
Contact
For more information and to see if you can join this study, please contact Dr. Edmund Bartlett’s office at 212-639-2448.
Protocol
23-056Phase
Phase II (phase 2)Investigator
Co-Investigators
Diseases
Locations
ClinicalTrials.gov ID
NCT05755113ClinicalTrials.gov
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Researchers want to find the best dose of xaluritamig to treat prostate cancer. The people in this study have prostate cancer that has not metastasized (spread) but keeps growing after treatment. Their doctors believe their cancers may respond to hormonal therapies that lower cancer-fueling testosterone. This type of cancer is called non-metastatic castration-sensitive prostate cancer.
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Researchers want to see if it is practical to give immunotherapy before kidney cancer surgery. The people in this study have no evidence of cancer spread in other parts of their body. Researchers also want to see if this treatment causes any delays in surgery. Immunotherapy is treatment that boosts the body's natural defenses to fight cancer.
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Germ cell tumors (GCTs) include ovarian teratomas and testicular cancers. The standard treatment for "low-risk" GCTs includes complete removal by surgery followed by chemotherapy with cisplatin, bleomycin, and etoposide, unless the patient is a young child, in which case careful observation may be adequate. GCTs are considered "standard risk" if the patient is under age 25 at diagnosis, the tumor was not completely removed during surgery or has spread to other parts of the body, or proteins in the blood called tumor markers are elevated. The standard treatment for standard-risk GCTs includes chemotherapy with cisplatin, bleomycin, and etoposide followed by surgery, followed by more chemotherapy if needed.
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A Study of the Voro Urologic Scaffold to Prevent Urinary Incontinence After Prostate Removal SurgeryProstate removal (prostatectomy), a treatment for prostate cancer, can cause urinary incontinence (the inability to control the flow of urine). People experience urinary incontinence in the days immediately following surgery, which can reduce quality of life. Most people experience urinary incontinence for several weeks to months after surgery, but it can last longer.
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Chemotherapy for lymphoma can cause side effects, especially in people age 65 and older and those with other health problems. Researchers want to see if adding the immunotherapy drugs glofitamab, polatuzumab, and obinutuzumab to treatment can reduce the amount of chemotherapy needed. The people in this study have diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL), or transformed lymphoma. Their cancer has not yet been treated.
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The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of nivolumab immunotherapy alone and with the drug cabozantinib to reduce the chance that mucosal melanoma will come back after surgery. Nivolumab boosts the power of the immune system to detect and destroy cancer cells. Cabozantinib inhibits cancer cell growth by blocking certain enzymes.