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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.


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(Last updated: April 18, 2024)

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1

NEAREST SITE: 2432 miles
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
Bethesda,MD

VISITS: Hospital stay for up to 9 days; screening test every few months for 2 years

PHASE: II

NCT ID: NCT03412877

Using Personalized T-Cells Along with Chemotherapy to Treat Metastatic Breast Cancer

Administration of Autologous T-Cells Genetically Engineered to Express T-Cell Receptors Reactive Against Mutated Neoantigens in People With Metastatic Cancer Scientific Title

Purpose
To study the safety and effects (good and bad) of an immunotherapy that uses personalized T cells.
Who is this for?
People with metastatic (stage IV) breast cancer for which standard treatments have not worked.    Full eligibility criteria
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  • What's involved?
  • What's being studied?
  • How can I learn more?
  • <p class="seamTextPara"> You will be in the hospital and receive the following: </p> <p class="seamTextPara"> <i class="seamTextEmphasis">Before hospital stay:</i> </p> <ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Leukapheresis (blood draw for the collection of cells), 2-4 months before receiving treatment</li> </ul> <p class="seamTextPara"> <i class="seamTextEmphasis">Hospital stay for receiving treatment (2-3 weeks):</i> </p> <ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan®), by IV, once a day, for 2 days </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Fludarabine (Fludara), by IV, once a day, for 5 days</li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Followed by Aldesleukin, by IV, once every 8 hours, for up to 4 days </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">TCR-Transduced T-Cells, by IV</li> </ul> <p class="seamTextPara"> <i class="seamTextEmphasis">After hospital stay:</i> </p> <ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Antibiotic and antiviral, for at least 6 months</li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Screening tests, every few months for the first year, every 6 months for the second year, then as determined</li></ul>
  • <ul class="seamTextUnorderedList"> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">To create the personalized T cells, cancer cells will be taken from your tumor and white blood cells will be removed from your blood. </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">The cancer cells will be analyzed to learn about the genetic mutations they contain. </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">In a lab, your white blood cells will be modified in ways that will help them go after your tumor cells. </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">They will then be infused into your body. This will take place in the hospital where the research study is taking place. </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">When you receive the infused T cells, you will also be given Aldesleukin, an immune function enhancing drug. </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">Your treatment will also include two chemotherapy drugs: cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan), which is used to treat breast cancer, and fludarabine (Fludara), which is approved to treat chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). </li> <li class="seamTextUnorderedListItem">This trial also is enrolling patients with other types of metastatic cancer.</li></ul>
  • <ul class='seamTextUnorderedList'><li class='seamTextUnorderedListItem'>View eligibility criteria and additional trial information: <a href='https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03412877' target='_blank'>ClinicalTrials.gov</a> </li><li class='seamTextUnorderedListItem'><a href='https://www.cancer.gov/news-events/press-releases/2014/ACTepithelial' target='_blank'>National Cancer Institute Press Release: Immunotherapy</a> </li></ul>
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