Treatment Trials

6 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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RECRUITING
Digoxin Medulloblastoma Study
Description

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of digoxin in treating relapsed non-SHH, non-WNT medulloblastoma in pediatric and young adult patients.

COMPLETED
Evaluation of LY2606368 Therapy in Combination With Cyclophosphamide or Gemcitabine for Children and Adolescents With Refractory or Recurrent Group 3/Group 4 or SHH Medulloblastoma Brain Tumors
Description

SJELIOT is a phase 1 trial that aims to explore the combination of prexasertib with established DNA-damaging agents used in medulloblastoma to evaluate tolerance and pharmacokinetics in recurrent or refractory disease. Additionally, a small expansion cohort will be incorporated into the trial at the combination MTD/RP2D (maximum tolerated dose/recommended phase two dose) to detect a preliminary efficacy signal. Stratum A: Prexasertib and Cyclophosphamide Primary Objectives * To determine the safety and tolerability and estimate the maximum tolerated dose (MTD)/recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of combination treatment with prexasertib and cyclophosphamide in participants with recurrent/refractory Group 3 and Group 4 medulloblastoma and recurrent/refractory sonic hedgehog (SHH) medulloblastoma. * To characterize the pharmacokinetics of prexasertib in combination with cyclophosphamide. Secondary Objectives * To estimate the rate and duration of objective response and progression free survival (PFS) associated with prexasertib and cyclophosphamide treatment in this patient population. * To characterize the pharmacokinetics of cyclophosphamide and metabolites. Stratum B: Prexasertib and Gemcitabine Primary Objectives * To determine the safety and tolerability and estimate the MTD/RP2D of combination treatment with prexasertib and gemcitabine in participants with recurrent/refractory Group 3 and Group 4 medulloblastoma. * To characterize the pharmacokinetics of prexasertib in combination with gemcitabine. Secondary Objectives * To estimate the rate and duration of objective response and PFS associated with prexasertib and gemcitabine treatment in this patient population. * To characterize the pharmacokinetics of gemcitabine and gemcitabine triphosphate (only at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital).

COMPLETED
SJDAWN: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Phase 1 Study Evaluating Molecularly-Driven Doublet Therapies for Children and Young Adults With Recurrent Brain Tumors
Description

Approximately 90% of children with malignant brain tumors that have recurred or relapsed after receiving conventional therapy will die of disease. Despite this terrible and frustrating outcome, continued treatment of this population remains fundamental to improving cure rates. Studying this relapsed population will help unearth clues to why conventional therapy fails and how cancers continue to resist modern advances. Moreover, improvements in the treatment of this relapsed population will lead to improvements in upfront therapy and reduce the chance of relapse for all. Novel therapy and, more importantly, novel approaches are sorely needed. This trial proposes a new approach that evaluates rational combination therapies of novel agents based on tumor type and molecular characteristics of these diseases. The investigators hypothesize that the use of two predictably active drugs (a doublet) will increase the chance of clinical efficacy. The purpose of this trial is to perform a limited dose escalation study of multiple doublets to evaluate the safety and tolerability of these combinations followed by a small expansion cohort to detect preliminary efficacy. In addition, a more extensive and robust molecular analysis of all the participant samples will be performed as part of the trial such that we can refine the molecular classification and better inform on potential response to therapy. In this manner the tolerability of combinations can be evaluated on a small but relevant population and the chance of detecting antitumor activity is potentially increased. Furthermore, the goal of the complementary molecular characterization will be to eventually match the therapy with better predictive biomarkers. PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: * To determine the safety and tolerability and estimate the maximum tolerated dose/recommended phase 2 dose (MTD/RP2D) of combination treatment by stratum. * To characterize the pharmacokinetics of combination treatment by stratum. SECONDARY OBJECTIVE: * To estimate the rate and duration of objective response and progression free survival (PFS) by stratum.

Conditions
Anaplastic AstrocytomaAnaplastic EpendymomaAnaplastic GangliogliomaAnaplastic MeningiomaAnaplastic OligodendrogliomaPleomorphic Xanthoastrocytoma, AnaplasticAtypical Teratoid/Rhabdoid TumorBrain CancerBrain TumorCentral Nervous System NeoplasmsChoroid Plexus CarcinomaCNS Embryonal Tumor With Rhabdoid FeaturesGanglioneuroblastoma of Central Nervous SystemCNS TumorEmbryonal Tumor of CNSEpendymomaGlioblastomaGliomaGlioma, MalignantMedulloblastomaMedulloblastoma; Unspecified SiteMedulloepitheliomaNeuroepithelial TumorNeoplasmsNeoplasms, NeuroepithelialPapillary Tumor of the Pineal Region (High-grade Only)Pediatric Brain TumorPineal Parenchymal Tumor of Intermediate Differentiation (High-grade Only)PineoblastomaPrimitive Neuroectodermal TumorRecurrent MedulloblastomaRefractory Brain TumorNeuroblastoma. CNSGlioblastoma, IDH-mutantGlioblastoma, IDH-wildtypeMedulloblastoma, Group 3Medulloblastoma, Group 4Glioma, High GradeNeuroepithelial Tumor, High GradeMedulloblastoma, SHH-activated and TP53 MutantMedulloblastoma, SHH-activated and TP53 WildtypeMedulloblastoma, Chromosome 9q LossMedulloblastoma, Non-WNT Non-SHH, NOSMedulloblastoma, Non-WNT/Non-SHHMedulloblastoma, PTCH1 MutationMedulloblastoma, WNT-activatedEpendymoma, RecurrentGlioma, Recurrent High GradeGlioma, Recurrent MalignantEmbryonal Tumor, NOSGlioma, Diffuse Midline, H3K27M-mutantEmbryonal Tumor With Multilayered Rosettes (ETMR)Ependymoma, NOS, WHO Grade IIIEpendymoma, NOS, WHO Grade IIMedulloblastoma, G3/G4Ependymoma, RELA Fusion Positive
RECRUITING
Molecular and Clinical Risk-Directed Therapy for Infants and Young Children With Newly Diagnosed Medulloblastoma
Description

This is a multi-center, multinational phase 2 trial that aims to explore the use of molecular and clinical risk-directed therapy in treatment of children 0-4.99 years of age with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma.

Conditions
RECRUITING
Adoptive T Cell Therapy, DC Vaccines, and Hematopoietic Stem Cells Combined With Immune checkPOINT Blockade in Patients With Medulloblastoma
Description

This is a pilot study in a small number of children and young adults with relapsed/progressive medulloblastoma (MB) looking at the feasibility and safety of adoptive cell therapy plus PD-1 blockade.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
A Clinical and Molecular Risk-Directed Therapy for Newly Diagnosed Medulloblastoma
Description

Historically, medulloblastoma treatment has been determined by the amount of leftover disease present after surgery, also known as clinical risk (standard vs. high risk). Recent studies have shown that medulloblastoma is made up of distinct molecular subgroups which respond differently to treatment. This suggests that clinical risk alone is not adequate to identify actual risk of recurrence. In order to address this, we will stratify medulloblastoma treatment in this phase II clinical trial based on both clinical risk (low, standard, intermediate, or high risk) and molecular subtype (WNT, SHH, or Non-WNT Non-SHH). This stratified clinical and molecular treatment approach will be used to evaluate the following: * To find out if participants with low-risk WNT tumors can be treated with a lower dose of radiation to the brain and spine, and a lower dose of the chemotherapy drug cyclophosphamide while still achieving the same survival rate as past St. Jude studies with fewer side effects. * To find out if adding targeted chemotherapy after standard chemotherapy will benefit participants with SHH positive tumors. * To find out if adding new chemotherapy agents to the standard chemotherapy will improve the outcome for intermediate and high risk Non-WNT Non-SHH tumors. * To define the cure rate for standard risk Non-WNT Non-SHH tumors treated with reduced dose cyclophosphamide and compare this to participants from the past St. Jude study. All participants on this study will have surgery to remove as much of the primary tumor as safely possible, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. The amount of radiation therapy and type of chemotherapy received will be determined by the participant's treatment stratum. Treatment stratum assignment will be based on the tumor's molecular subgroup assignment and clinical risk. The participant will be assigned to one of three medulloblastoma subgroups determined by analysis of the tumor tissue for tumor biomarkers: * WNT (Strata W): positive for WNT biomarkers * SHH (Strata S): positive for SHH biomarkers * Non-WNT Non-SHH, Failed, or Indeterminate (Strata N): negative for WNT and SHH biomarkers or results are indeterminable Participants will then be assigned to a clinical risk group (low, standard, intermediate, or high) based on assessment of: * How much tumor is left after surgery * If the cancer has spread to other sites outside the brain \[i.e., to the spinal cord or within the fluid surrounding the spinal cord, called cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)\] * The appearance of the tumor cells under the microscope * Whether or not there are chromosomal abnormalities in the tumor, and if present, what type (also called cytogenetics analysis)

Conditions