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Find Breast Cancer Clinical Trials That Are Right For You
The clinical trials listed below are open in the U.S. for people with DCIS (stage 0), stage 1, stage 2, stage 3, or stage 4 (metastatic)
breast cancer. Clinical trials are available for people who are newly diagnosed with breast cancer, currently in treatment, experiencing
breast cancer recurrence, living with metastatic disease, as well as breast cancer survivors who have completed treatment.
Use the search box and filters to find a trial that’s right for you.
Currently viewing trials
(Last updated: April 24, 2024)
Brain Mets
BRCA1/2 (inherited)
Chemotherapy
Hormone Therapy
Leptomeningeal Disease
Radiation Oncology
Surgery
Surgery: Reconstruction
Targeted Therapy: All
Targeted Therapy: ADC
Targeted Therapy: Anti-HER2 Therapy
Targeted Therapy: CDK Inhibitors
Targeted Therapy: PARP Inhibitors
Targeted Therapy: Tumor Mutations
Targeted Therapy: Other Targeted Therapy
Vaccines and Immunotherapy
Other Treatment
Activities
Complementary and Integrative Medicine
Decision Support
Diagnosing Breast Cancer
Genetics/Family History
Having Children
Healthy/High Risk
Imaging
Lymphedema
Managing Side Effects
No Travel Required
Predicting Response to Treatment
Preventing Breast Cancer
Preventing Recurrence
Support/Education
Surveys/Interviews/Registries
AKT
ALK
AR
BARD1
BRCA1/2 (tumor)
BRIP1
CD205
CD70
CHEK2 or CHEK1
dMMR/MSI-H
ESR1
FGFR
HER2/ERBB2
HLA
MET or C-Met
NTRK
PALB2
PIK3CA or PI3K
PTEN
RAD51
RAF (including BRAF)
RAS (KRAS or NRAS)
RB
ROS1
TP53
NEAREST SITE: 2314 miles
Comprehensive Cancer Center at Wake Forest University (CCCWFU)
Winston-Salem,NC
VISITS: 1 visit every 2 weeks, ongoing
PHASE: II
NCT ID: NCT02422641
Methotrexate in Metastatic Breast Cancer With Leptomeningeal Metastasis
Traditional Incision and Drainage of Cutaneous Abscess Vs. Minimally Invasive Incision and Drainage With Vessel Loop: A Randomized Controlled Trail Scientific Title
- What's involved?
- What's being studied?
- How can I learn more?
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<p class="seamTextPara"> You will receive the following: </p> <ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">High-dose Methotrexate (HD-MTX), by IV, once every 2 weeks</li></ul>
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<ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Leptomeningeal metastases are when cancer spreads to the membranes surrounding the brain and/or the spinal cord (leptomeninges) or to the cerebrospinal fluid.</li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Methotrexate is a chemotherapy approved to treat advanced breast cancer.</li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Researchers believe methotrexate can cross the blood-brain barrier, which will allow the drug to reach the leptomeningeal metastases.</li></ul>
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<ul class='seamTextUnorderedList'><li class='seamTextUnorderedListItem'>View eligibility criteria and additional trial information: <a href='https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02422641' target='_blank'>ClinicalTrials.gov</a> </li><li class='seamTextUnorderedListItem'><a href='https://www.mdanderson.org/publications/cancerwise/2017/04/new-hope-for-leptomeningeal-disease-care.html' target='_blank'>MDAnderson: New Hope for Leptomeningeal Disease Care</a> </li><li class='seamTextUnorderedListItem'><a href='https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/secondary-cancer/leptomeningeal-metastases/what-are#:~:text=Leptomeningeal%20metastases%20mean%20cancer%20cells,leptomeningeal%20disease' target='_blank'>Cancer Research UK: What are Leptomeningeal Metastases?</a> </li></ul>