Study of the Immunoresponse in Patients Treated With a Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor
Study to the Humoral and Cellular Immunoresponse After Influenza Vaccination in Patients With Metastasized RCC or GIST Treated With a Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor(Sunitinib or Sorafenib)
Sponsor: Radboud University Medical Center
A observational or N/A phase clinical study on GIST and Renal Cell Carcinoma, this trial is completed. The trial is conducted by Radboud University Medical Center and has accumulated 7 data snapshots since 2008. Oncology trials at this stage typically focus on safety, tolerability, and early efficacy signals.
Study Description(click to expand)When cure is not longer possible, cancer patients enter the palliative phase. For many types of cancer several treatment options are available. The goal of this treatment is to prolong survival, but maintenance or even improvement of quality of life is of equal importance. The currently available systemic treatment options consist of conventional cytotoxic therapy, hormonal therapy, immunotherapy and the so-called targeted therapies. Combinations of these therapies are also being used. Targeted therapy concerns the application of a new class of drugs that are specifically directed against one or more well-defined molecular targets that are relevant for carcinogenesis, cell cycle regulation, tumour progression, metastasis, tumour angiogenesis and/or apoptosis. Today, the most successful drugs in this class are directed against the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). There is an explosive development ongoing in this field and many new drugs become available that have new targets or inhibit a combinations of targets. Meanwhile, targeted therapy has shown efficacy in many types of cancer and is registered for several indications. The toxicity profile of targeted therapies is still largely unknown, and the aetiology of many known side effects has not been clarified. At the moment, three...
When cure is not longer possible, cancer patients enter the palliative phase. For many types of cancer several treatment options are available. The goal of this treatment is to prolong survival, but maintenance or even improvement of quality of life is of equal importance. The currently available systemic treatment options consist of conventional cytotoxic therapy, hormonal therapy, immunotherapy and the so-called targeted therapies. Combinations of these therapies are also being used. Targeted therapy concerns the application of a new class of drugs that are specifically directed against one or more well-defined molecular targets that are relevant for carcinogenesis, cell cycle regulation, tumour progression, metastasis, tumour angiogenesis and/or apoptosis. Today, the most successful drugs in this class are directed against the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). There is an explosive development ongoing in this field and many new drugs become available that have new targets or inhibit a combinations of targets. Meanwhile, targeted therapy has shown efficacy in many types of cancer and is registered for several indications. The toxicity profile of targeted therapies is still largely unknown, and the aetiology of many known side effects has not been clarified. At the moment, three targeted therapies that are directed against VEGF are registered and used in the Netherlands: Sunitinib (Sutent®) and Sorafenib (Nexavar ®) both oral drugs and Bevacizumab (Avastin®), an intravenously drug. Clinical experience and some mouse studies show that targeted therapies could have a negative effect on the immune response. This can be of great influence on patients who are treated with this type of drug.
Especially because these drug will be used chronically and sometimes for years and infections can have a large influence on the health and quality of life of these patients.
Status Flow
Change History
7 versions recorded-
Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]
Completed
-
Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed
-
Mar 2022 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed
-
Jan 2021 — Mar 2022 [monthly]
Completed
-
Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Completed
▶ Show 2 earlier versions
-
Apr 2018 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Completed
Phase: NA → None
-
Jan 2017 — Apr 2018 [monthly]
Completed NA
First recorded
Oct 2008
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- Radboud University Medical Center
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .