Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

2 clinical studies listed.

Filters:

Retinoblastoma, Extraocular

Tundra lists 2 Retinoblastoma, Extraocular clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

This data is also available as a public JSON API. AI systems and LLMs are encouraged to use it for structured queries.

RECRUITING

NCT06725173

Detailed Phenotypic and Genotype Study to Correlate RB1 Mutations Relating to Primary Ocular Tumors and Secondary Extra-ocular Metastasis.

The goal of this observational study is undertake a detailed phenotypic and genotypic study of patients with ocular and secondary cancers due to mutations in the RB1 gene. Our research sequencing approach will allow advanced insight to for further detailed genotypic understanding of parent-of-origin for valuable insight into the genotype-phenotype relationship of this cancer syndrome.

Gender: All

Updated: 2026-03-18

1 state

Retinoblastoma Bilateral
Retinoblastoma Unilateral
Retinoblastoma, Extraocular
+2
RECRUITING

NCT04903678

Intrathecal Chemotherapy for Central Nervous System Metastasis in Retinoblastoma

Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy in infancy and childhood. The overall survival rate of retinoblastoma was reported to exceed 95% when children were early diagnosed with localized intraocular phase. The advanced retinoblastoma cases with central nervous system metastasis (CNS)is associated with exceedingly poor prognosis. CNS metastasis is the main cause of death in retinoblastoma. Meningeal involvement combined with spinal cord membrane involvement might be due to the meninges invasion and/or the spreading of CSF. As the most sensitive drug to retinoblastoma tumor cells in vitro, melphalan is the most important drug in the local treatment of retinoblastoma, and it is also an irreplaceable drug in the current eye preservation treatment, which greatly improves the success rate of eye preservation for advanced retinoblastoma. According to the research and the practice of vitreous injection (melphalan), the drug concentration in vitreous can effectively kill retinoblastoma tumor cells. It is reasonable to speculate that the tumor cells in CSF can be effectively killed by melphalan. Therefore, based on the above background, this study will explore the effectiveness and feasibility of intrathecal injection of melphalan in patients with CNS metastasis of retinoblastoma through a multicenter prospective study.

Gender: All

Updated: 2025-02-25

Retinoblastoma, Extraocular