Plain-English translation of NCT06627595 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Melanoma research guide →Researchers want to understand whether regular physical activity can help reduce the side effects people experience when taking for melanoma. This medication works by boosting your immune system to fight cancer, but it can sometimes cause unwanted effects. The study will track your current activity level and monitor how many side effects you have over 6 months of treatment.
has greatly improved outcomes for people with advanced melanoma, but the treatment can trigger side effects that feel like autoimmune conditions. Early research suggests that physical activity may help calm the immune system in ways that could reduce these side effects, but this hasn't been thoroughly tested yet in melanoma patients.
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You will be grouped based on your current physical activity level when you start the study. Over the next 6 months, you'll continue your as normal while researchers track how active you are and monitor what side effects you experience. You'll complete questionnaires about your activity and have regular check-ins to document any side effects from the medication.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 7, 2026 · Not medical advice
France