3 results match your criteria: "The Christie Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and University of Manchester[Affiliation]"
BMJ Open
March 2024
Department of Infection, Immunity, and Cardiovascular Disease, The University of Sheffield and Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Sheffield, UK.
Objectives: To explore the importance of, and barriers to achieving, diversity in early-phase clinical trials.
Design: Qualitative interviews analysed using thematic analysis.
Setting And Participants: Five professionals (clinical researchers and methodologists) and three patient and public representatives (those with experience of early-phase clinical trials and/or those from ethnic minority backgrounds) were interviewed between June and August 2022.
J Immunother Cancer
July 2021
Department of Medical Oncology, Virginia Cancer Specialists, Fairfax, Virginia, USA.
Background: Probody therapeutics are antibody prodrugs that are activated in the tumor microenvironment by tumor-associated proteases, thereby restricting the activity to the tumor microenvironment and minimizing 'off-tumor' toxicity. We report dose-escalation and single-agent expansion phase data from the first-in-human study of CX-072 (pacmilimab), a Probody checkpoint inhibitor directed against programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1).
Methods: In the dose-escalation phase of this multicenter, open-label study (NCT03013491), adults with advanced solid tumors (naive to programmed-death-1/PD-L1 or cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 inhibitors) were enrolled into one of seven dose-escalation cohorts, with pacmilimab administered intravenously every 14 days.
J Immunother Cancer
July 2021
Department of Medical Oncology, The Christie Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Background: Probody® therapeutics are antibody prodrugs designed to be activated by tumor-associated proteases. This conditional activation restricts antibody binding to the tumor microenvironment, thereby minimizing 'off-tumor' toxicity. Here, we report the phase 1 data from the first-in-human study of CX-072 (pacmilimab), a Probody immune checkpoint inhibitor directed against programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), in combination with the anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (anti-CTLA-4) antibody ipilimumab.
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