CCTG has opened the anticipated international brain cancer study CCTG CE9 (LUMOS2) - joining forces with the Australian Cooperative Trials Group for Neuro-Oncology (COGNO) to make enrollment accessible to Canadian patients.
MRD Driven Study of Venetoclax + Chemotherapy for Newly Diagnosed Younger Patients with Intermediate Risk AML
Novel Therapeutics in Younger Patients with High-Risk AML (MM1YA-S01)
MODERN: An Integrated Phase 2/3 and Phase 3 Trial of MRD-Based Optimization of ADjuvant ThErapy in URothelial CaNcer
NEoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for Esophageal scc vs Definitive chemoradiotherapy with salvage Surgery as needed (NEEDS Trial)
The CCTG ES3 NEEDS international esophageal cancer clinical trial is now opened in Canada. The study is investigating whether delaying surgery for patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus is as good as the current treatment.
Eradicating MRD in patients with AML prior to Stem Cell Transplant (ERASE)
Radiotherapy to Block (CURB2) Oligoprogression In Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
VIGOR: Vorasidenib as Maintenance Treatment after First-line Chemoradiotherapy in IDH-mutant Grade 2 or 3 Astrocytoma
Botensilimab + Balstilimab or Botensilimab Alone vs Best Supportive Care as Therapy in Chemo-refractory, Advanced, Colorectal Adenocarcinoma: The BATTMAN Trial
SLIDE-HCC: Phase II trial of STRIDE (durvalumab + tremelimumab) + lenvatinib vs STRIDE in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma
CALMS: Combination Therapy with Luspatercept in Lower Risk MDS CTEP approval: 2024AUG27 (date of US Steering Committee Evaluation)
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a blood test can help us make better decisions about who should get immunotherapy after surgery for bladder cancer and which immunotherapy treatment is best.
The study will investigate a new test which can detect bladder cancer DNA in the blood. This is important because this test might indicate the presence of bladder cancer cells somewhere in the body, even if cancer can’t be seen on a scan of the body.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effects on you and your prostate cancer of a new drug compared to other drugs which are the current standard treatment for this disease. The addition of the new drug to standard treatment could prevent your prostate cancer from progressing, but this cannot be known for sure. This study will help doctors find out if this different approach is better than the usual one.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effects on you and your prostate cancer of getting a higher dose of radiation therapy given over a shorter period of time compared to the current way radiation therapy is used to treat prostate cancer.
The purpose of this study is to see if adding a new drug to other drugs which are commonly used to treat metastatic urothelial cancer is better than the commonly used drugs alone.