Oncologists at the MSU Veterinary Medical Center conduct clinical research in order to find safer or more effective methods to screen for, prevent, diagnose, or treat cancers. Some findings may even have implications for human medicine.
Clinical trials often require patients to meet certain requirements in order for the trial to effectively pinpoint its research investigations. Some trials offer subsidies or funding for care, and each is carefully designed and reviewed for safety. Please ask your veterinarian to contact MSU for further information about any of the studies listed here.
- Direct comparison of CHOP and LOPP chemotherapy and genomic analysis for naïve T cell lymphoma in client-owned dogs
- Dose escalation study for a novel sting agonist in tumor-bearing dogs
- Phase II open-label non-randomized multicenter clinical trial of trametinib for dogs with histiocytic sarcoma
- Pilot study for a new quasiorganelle therapy in dogs with histiocytic sarcoma
- Time to maximal response to neoadjuvant corticosteroids in dogs with mast cell tumors
- Efficacy and safety of a novel anti-cancer therapeutic for the treatment of metastatic mammary carcinoma in cats
Find clinical trials outside of Oncology here.