Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials in Glendale, AZ

Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials in Glendale, AZ

View the best 10 colorectal cancer medical studies in Glendale, Arizona. Access promising new therapies by applying to a Glendale-based Colorectal Cancer clinical trial.

Top rated colorectal cancer clinical trials in Glendale, Arizona

Here are the top 10 medical studies for colorectal cancer in Glendale, Arizona

Image of Saint Joseph Heritage Medical Group in Santa Rosa, United States.

Tucatinib +5 More

Small Molecule Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting2 awardsPhase 3
This trial is testing to see if tucatinib in combination with other drugs is more effective than standard of care drugs at treating participants with HER2 positive colorectal cancer.
Image of Dignity Health St Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, United States.

Entrectinib

Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is testing a new drug, entrectinib, for patients with different types of solid tumors that have a gene fusion. Patients will be assigned to different groups depending on their tumor type and gene fusion.
Image of Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center in Phoenix, United States.

T3011 +1 More

Virus Therapy

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1 & 2
This trial is testing a new drug, T3011, to see if it's safe and effective in treating people with advanced solid tumors. The study will also compare T3011 given alone to T3011 given with another drug, pembrolizumab.
Image of Katmai Oncology Group in Anchorage, United States.

Leucovorin Calcium, Fluorouracil, Oxaliplatin

Chemotherapy

Recruiting2 awardsPhase 3
This trial is testing a combination of chemotherapy drugs with atezolizumab to see if it is more effective than chemotherapy alone in treating patients with stage III colon cancer. Atezolizumab is an immunotherapy drug that may help the body's immune system attack the cancer.
Image of Alaska Oncology in Anchorage, United States.

LBL-007 +3 More

Chemotherapy

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1 & 2
This trial studies a combo therapy for colorectal cancer, to see if it's safe and effective.
Image of Exelixis Clinical Site #53 in Gilbert, United States.

Cabozantinib +1 More

Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1 & 2
This trial is testing the safety and effectiveness of a new cancer drug when used in combination with another cancer drug. The new drug is being tested on people with different types of cancer, including bladder, kidney, prostate, and breast cancer.
Image of HonorHealth Research Institute - Bisgrove in Scottsdale, United States.

Autogene Cevumeran +1 More

Cancer Vaccine

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1
This trial is testing a new drug, RO7198457, to see if it is safe and works well against cancer.
Image of CTCA at Western Regional Medical Center in Goodyear, United States.

Trastuzumab +3 More

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial studies trastuzumab and pertuzumab compared to cetuximab and irinotecan hydrochloride in treating patients with HER2/neu amplified colorectal cancer.
Image of Mayo Clinic in Arizona in Scottsdale, United States.

Liposomal Irinotecan +3 More

Topoisomerase I inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1 & 2
This trial is studying the side effects of a combination of drugs, liposomal irinotecan, rucaparib, fluorouracil, and leucovorin calcium, in treating patients with pancreatic, colorectal, gastroesophageal, or biliary cancer that has spread to other places in the body.
Image of START Midwest in Grand Rapids, United States.

Pembrolizumab +1 More

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting1 awardPhase 1
This trial is testing a new drug, NGM831, as a possible treatment for advanced or metastatic solid tumors.

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Phase 3 Clinical Trials

View 63 phase 3 medical studies.

Clinical Trials With No Placebo

View 63 medical studies that do not have a placebo group.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need insurance to participate in a trial?
Almost all clinical trials will cover the cost of the 'trial drug' — 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 — in general, verified trials respond to patients within a few days.