9 results
The purpose of this trial is: • to study the effect of a single dose of GAL-054 (the test medication) in healthy volunteers on the functioning of the body, especially on respiration, and compare this with the effect of a single dose of doxapram.• to…
The purpose of this study is testing a respiratory stimulant, doxapram. Painkillers such as morphine and alfentanil mute breathing. This is often undesirable, especially in patients. To counteract this attenuation is often used drugs also take away…
To determine the toxicity of Zirconium-89 (Zr89) labelled Cetuximab in patient with stage IV cancer.
The primary objective is to assess the efficacy of alectinib in terms of best overall response (OR) assessed by RECIST v1.1. The secondary objectives are to evaluate secondary measures of clinical efficacy including disease control, progression-free…
The primary objectives for Part 1:-To determine the recommended Phase II dose of RO5424802 to be used in Part 2 of the study-To evaluate the safety and tolerability of 600mg and 900mg doses of RO5424802 administered twice daily to subjects with…
The overall objectives of this study are to evaluate the efficacy and safety of multiple therapies in patients with locally advanced, unresectable, Stage III NSCLC who are selected according to biomarker status as identified by tissue-based testing.…
The primary objective will be a prolonged mPFS for the TDM-guided dosing cohort versus the standard fixed dosing cohort in the group of patients with an alectinib Cmin below the threshold of< 435 ng/mL. The secondary objectives are…
The main objective of our trial is to investigate if doxapram is safe and effective in reducing the composite outcome of death and neurodevelopmental impairment/severe disability at 2 years corrected age as compared to placebo.
Study MX39795 will compare the efficacy and safety of molecularly-guided therapy versusstandard platinum-containing chemotherapy in patients with poor prognosis cancer of unknown primary site(CUP; non-specific subset) who have achieved disease…