BA3011 for advanced solid tumors
This study involves taking a study drug called BA3011. The overall goal of this study is to see if BA3011 is a possible treatment for patients with sarcoma.
Find research studies available to children cared for by the Cancer Center team.
This study involves taking a study drug called BA3011. The overall goal of this study is to see if BA3011 is a possible treatment for patients with sarcoma.
CHOP, in collaboration with Onyx Therapeutics, Inc., is conducting a study for children and young adults up to 21 years old, with relapsed or refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia. This clinical trial is adding the study drug, Carfilzomib, to a standard relapse chemotherapy regimen. For more information about this study, including specific eligibility criteria, please visit clinicaltrials.gov and search for "NCT02303821". To hear more about this and other available trails or get any questions answered please contact our Cancer Intake Specialist by phone at 267-426-0762 or email Oncointake@email.chop.edu.
The purpose of this research study is to determine if certain markers in your blood are increased over the duration of your chemotherapy, especially as you get sicker, such as developing a severe infection (sepsis) or severe respiratory failure (acute respiratory distress syndrome).
This study involves taking a study drug called Lutathera. The overall goal of this study is to see if Lutathera is safe in adolescent subjects with either a gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (GEP-NET), or a pheochromocytoma and/or paraganglioma (PPGL). This study will also look at the levels of radioactivity after Lutathera administration.
This is a clinical trial for patients with neuroblastoma that has returned (relapsed) or has not responded to standard treatment. The patients will have a biopsy of their tumor that will be tested for genetic changes and then matched to available drugs. If the results from the testing show molecular features in the tumor that allow for study treatment, patients will be invited for further testing to see if they are eligible for new treatments. Experimental therapies are all taken orally and may consist of one drug or a combination of drugs
The purpose of the Phase 2 portion of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the study drug called palbociclib when given in combination with two other drugs (temozolomide and irinotecan) in patients with Ewing sarcoma and when given in combination with topotecan and cyclophosphamide in patients with neuroblastoma.
The purpose of this study is to test the safety and efficacy of the investigational drug called Selpercatinib in children whose cancers have a specific genetic change (RET-fusion or RET-mutation). Selpercatinib has been FDA-approved for adults and pediatric patients 12 years of age or older for certain types of lung and thyroid cancers. Selpercatinib is administered in capsule form, liquid suspension, or may also be administered by a feeding tube for subjects who are unable to swallow.
This study involves taking a study drug called selpercatinib. The overall goal of this study is to find out how effective the study drug is in combination with radioactive iodine (I-131) in treating people with thyroid cancer. The study drug will be given in combination with treatments you will receive as part of your regular cancer care (I-131 and thyrotropin alfa).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects, good or bad, of targeted therapies or immunotherapy (drugs that help the body's immune system fight cancer cells) in patients who have solid tumors with specific genetic alterations or with a high number of mutations. Patients will be assigned to cohorts (groups) based on having a specific type of genetic alteration in their tumor. The study includes cohorts for patients whose tumors have genetic alterations in the ROS1, NTRK, PIK3CA, BRAF, or RET genes or a high number of mutations in their tumor.
This study enrolls patients that have been diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), or mixed phenotype acute leukemia (MPAL) that has either come back (relapsed) or does not respond to therapy (refractory). This study involves taking a drug called uproleselan that is not yet approved for use in children or adults. The purpose of the study is to find a safe dose of the study drug in children that can be given with standard chemotherapy without causing severe side effects.