City of Hope is committed to providing new and innovative treatments for our cancer patients whenever possible. This includes enrolling qualified patients in carefully selected clinical trials for cancer. Clinical trials are a key testing ground for determining the effectiveness and safety of new treatments and drugs for cancer and other diseases. Our doctors may recommend that cancer patients enroll in cancer clinical trials if they meet specific criteria. Cancer trials may offer patients access to treatment options that would otherwise be unavailable to them. Talk to your doctor about whether a cancer trial is a good option for you and ask about the risks and various requirements involved. Use the tool below to find a clinical trial for your cancer type at City of Hope Atlanta, Chicago or Phoenix.
This ComboMATCH patient screening trial is the gateway to a coordinated set of clinical trials to study cancer treatment directed by genetic testing. Patients with solid tumors that have spread to nearby tissue or lymph nodes (locally advanced) or have spread to other places in the body (advanced) and have progressed on at least one line of standard systemic therapy or have no standard treatment that has been shown to prolong overall survival may be candidates for these trials.
The main objective of the study will be to evaluate the efficacy of sutetinib maleate capsules in participants with locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer NSCLC (uncommon EGFR mutations only).
This is a randomized, open-label study of HLX10 plus chemotherapy (Carboplatin-Etoposide) in comparison with Atezolizumab plus chemotherapy in previously untreated US patients with ES-SCLC.
This is a Phase 2b, multicenter, open-label study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Sutetinib Maleate Capsule in Locally Advanced or Metastatic NSCLC (Non-resistant Uncommon EGFR Mutations Only, Including L861Q, G719X, and/or S768I)
This phase 3 trial studies how well letrozole with or without paclitaxel and carboplatin works in treating patients with stage 2-4 low-grade serous carcinoma of the ovary, fallopian tube, or peritoneum.
This is a multicenter, non-randomized, open-label, multiple-dose, FIH study. The study consists of two parts: Part 1 adopts an accelerated titration at first dose level followed with classic "3+3" design to identify the MTD/RP2D; Part 2 is a dose expansion phase to confirm the safety, tolerability and explore efficacy in selected malignant solid tumors at the MTD/the RP2D. This study will enroll subjects with advanced/unresectable, recurrent, or metastatic HER2-expressing malignant solid tumors.
The TAPUR study is a clinical trial that aims to improve our understanding of how commercially available anti-cancer drugs perform on a broader range of cancers, by matching the drugs to tumors with specific genomic mutations that the drugs are designed to target.