Glioblastoma Clinical Trials in San Antonio, TX

Glioblastoma Clinical Trials in San Antonio, TX

View the best 10 glioblastoma medical studies in San Antonio, Texas. Access promising new therapies by applying to a San Antonio-based Glioblastoma clinical trial.

Trials in San Antonio, Texas

Here are the top 10 medical studies for glioblastoma in San Antonio, Texas

Image of Children's Hospital of Alabama in Birmingham, United States.

Ensartinib

Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial studies how well ensartinib works in treating patients with solid tumors, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, or histiocytic disorders with ALK or ROS1 genomic alterations.
Image of Children's Hospital of Alabama in Birmingham, United States.

Erdafitinib

Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial uses erdafitinib to treat patients with solid tumors, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, or histiocytic disorders that have spread and come back or don't respond to treatment with FGFR mutations.
Image of Grandview Cancer Center in Birmingham, United States.

OptuneĀ®

Device

Recruiting1 award12 criteria
This trial is testing a new treatment for brain cancer that combines Optune with radiation and chemotherapy. The goal is to see if this new combination is more effective and has fewer side effects than current treatments.
Image of City of Hope Medical Center in Duarte, United States.

CHM-1101 CAR-T cells

CAR T-cell Therapy

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1
This trial tests a new cancer treatment (CHM-1101) for glioblastoma to see if it is safe & effective.
Image of City of Hope in Duarte, United States.

INO-5401 +4 More

Cancer Vaccine

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1 & 2
This trial is testing a new combination of drugs to treat glioblastoma, a type of brain cancer.
Image of University of Alabama at Birmingham in Birmingham, United States.

VAL-083 +7 More

Alkylating agents

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2 & 3
This trial is testing various treatments for patients with newly diagnosed or returning brain cancer. It adjusts treatments based on how well patients are doing to find the most effective options. The goal is to improve survival rates by matching the best treatments to specific patient types.
Image of Children's Hospital of Alabama in Birmingham, United States.

Radiation Therapy

Radiation

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial studies how well dabrafenib and trametinib work after radiation therapy in children and young adults with a specific type of brain tumor. These drugs help stop tumor growth by blocking signals that tell the cells to multiply. Dabrafenib has been developed and tested extensively for a specific type of skin cancer, showing effectiveness both alone and when used with trametinib.
Image of Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, United States.

Berubicin +1 More

Anthracenedione

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial will compare the effect of two cancer drugs, berubicin and lomustine, on overall survival in patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) who have failed standard first line therapy. A futility analysis will be performed after approximately 30-50% of planned patients have completed the primary endpoint at 6 months.
Image of University of Alabama at Birmingham Cancer Center in Birmingham, United States.

Temozolomide +2 More

Alkylating agents

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is studying how well two types of radiation therapy work compared to standard radiation therapy when given with temozolomide in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma.
Image of Children's Hospital of Alabama in Birmingham, United States.

Veliparib +2 More

PARP Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is studying a combination of drugs as a potential treatment for newly diagnosed malignant glioma. The drugs being studied are veliparib, radiation therapy, and temozolomide.

Trials With No Placebo

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need insurance to participate in a trial?
Almost all clinical trials will cover the cost of the 'trial drug' ā€” so no insurance is required for this. For trials where this trial drug is given alongside an already-approved medication, there may be a cost (which your insurance would normally cover).
Is there any support for travel costs?
Many of the teams running clinical trials will cover the cost of transportation to-and-from their care center.
Will I know what medication I am taking?
This depends on the specific study. If you're worried about receiving a placebo, you can actively filter out these trials using our search.
How long do clinical trials last?
Some trials will only require a single visit, while others will continue until your disease returns. It's fairly common for a trial to last somewhere between 1 and 6 months.
Do you verify all the trials on your website?
All of the trials listed on Power have been formally registered with the US Food and Drug Administration. Beyond this, some trials on Power have been formally 'verified' if the team behind the trial has completed an additional level of verification with our team.
How quickly will I hear back from a clinical trial?
Sadly, this response time can take anywhere from 6 hours to 2 weeks. We're working hard to speed up how quickly you hear back ā€” in general, verified trials respond to patients within a few days.