NCT04691713

CD276 CAR-T for Patients With Advanced CD276+ Solid Tumors

Study Summary

This study is a clinical study of CD276 CAR-T in the treatment of patients with advanced solid tumors. The purpose is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of targeting CD276 auto-chimeric antigen receptor T cells in the treatment of CD276-positive advanced solid tumors.

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Interventions

Targeting CD276 autologous chimeric antigen receptor T cellsDRUG
Chimeric antigen receptor T cells (car-t) is one of the most effective therapies for malignant tumors (especially hematological tumors). Like other immunotherapies, the basic principle is to use the patient's own immune cells to clear cancer cells. Chimeric antigen receptor (car) is the core component of car-t, which endows T cells with the ability to recognize tumor antigens in an independent manner, which enables car modified T cells to recognize a wider range of targets than natural T cell surface receptors (TCR). The basic design of car includes a tumor associated antigen binding region (usually derived from scFv segment of monoclonal antibody antigen binding region), transmembrane region and intracellular signal region. The selection of target antigen is a key determinant for the specificity and effectiveness of car and the safety of genetically modified T cells.

Study Locations

FacilityCityStateCountry
Bin Hu HospitalHefeiAnhuiChina

Official Trial Information

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov. Last updated: April 14, 2026