Breadcrumb

Clinical trial researching combination drug therapy for neuroendocrine carcinomas

Patient with doctor

Doctor speaking with patient. Image credit: Canva

High-grade neuroendocrine carcinomas (HGNEC) are cancers that develop in different parts of the body, including the digestive tract, genitals, neck, and head. One drug (belinostat), combined with two other drugs (etoposide and cisplatin), is approved to treat HGNEC. But some people may have a gene variant that affects how quickly their body gets rid of the drug; these people may do better with different dosages of belinostat.

A clinical trial led by Jaydira Del Rivero, M.D., Associate Research Physician in the Developmental Therapeutics Branch, is researching the effects of varying doses of belinostat for adults with high-grade neuroendocrine carcinomas.

The trial will take place at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, and there is no cost for medical care received at the Clinical Center.

For more information, please contact the NCI Cancer Information Service at 1-888-624-1937 or nciinfo@mail.nih.gov

Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT06406465

NCI Protocol ID: IRB001601

Official Title: A UGT1A1 Genotype-Directed Study of Belinostat Pharmacokinetics and Toxicity

The Center for Cancer Research is NCI’s internal cancer center, a publicly funded organization working to improve the lives of cancer patients by solving important, challenging and neglected problems in cancer research and patient care. Highly trained physician-scientists develop and carry out clinical trials to create the medicines of tomorrow treating patients at the world’s largest dedicated research hospital on the campus of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

For more information on CCR clinical trials click here, and subscribe to have the latest CCR clinical trials sent directly to your inbox.

Posted on Mon, 01/13/2025