View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:Standard treatment for stage III Non-Small Cells Lung Cancer (NSCLC) not eligibile for surgery is concomitant chemoradiotherapy. However median progression free survival and overall survival is still poor with only 15% of patients alive at 5 years. The addition of maintenance therapy with durvalumab after chemoradiation showed a significant benefit in PFS and OS, with good tolerability and no concerns in terms of safety. However, about 30% of patients with stage III are not eligible to concurrent chemoradiotherapy because of large volumes of the tumor. To date, these patients are initially treated with chemotherapy with the aim of reducing tumor volumes and allowing sequential radiotherapy. Response rate ranges between 25-30% and majority of patients will not become suitable for radiotherapy. The combination of immunotherapy plus standard chemotherapy in advanced stages doubles response rates and provides major tumor shrinkage compared to standard chemotherapy alone. For these reasons, the investigators want to exploit the synergistic effect of immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy in the induction phase, in order to render suitable for radiotherapy a larger number of patients, and in a second phase the synergistic effect with radiotherapy. Based on these premises the investigators designed a single arm, phase 2 trial to determine the efficacy and safety of combining immunotherapy with the drug durvalumab in association with standard chemotherapy and subsequently with standard radiotherapy, followed by a treatment of maintenance with only durvalumab. The study population includes patients with NSCLC not eligible for surgery or concurrent chemoradiation at diagnosis because of large tumor volumes. BRIDGE trial aims to evaluate the proportion of patients who did not progress and who achieved a mean lung dose <20 Gy and/or a lung V20<35% (response) after part 1. The primary objective of the study is to increase the proportion of patients eligible for immunotherapy plus radiotherapy after induction with durvalumab and chemotherapy, in comparison with historical controls. This study will last approximately 60 months and will include approximately 65 eligible patients in 3 international cancer centres of excellence.
The study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment with chemotherapy in combination with osimertinib compared to chemotherapy in combination with placebo in patients whose disease has progressed extracranially following first-line osimertinib treatment.
This study aims to characterize the clinical management and outcomes of participants diagnosed with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who are being treated with alectinib in real-world clinical practice.
This is a prospective data collection study of patients with advanced solid tumors who will receive standard of care immunotherapy (IO) and will be monitored with SIGNATERA™ testing. SIGNATERA™ test will be performed at baseline and during routine care. The test results will be part of assessing tumor response. The correlation between SIGNATERA™ test results and subsequent treatment decisions will be examined to compare actual treatment delivered against treatment decisions potentially impacted by SIGNATERA™ results. Treatment administered, tumor assessment results, time to progression, overall survival, physician questionnaires, and patient-reported outcomes will be collected/recorded.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ociperlimab + tislelizumab compared with that of pembrolizumab in adults with PD-L1 high, locally advanced/recurrent or untreated metastatic NSCLC.
Evaluate the clinical utility and early performance of the Cios 3D Mobile Spin in conjunction with the Ion Endoluminal System, to visualize and facilitate the sampling of pulmonary nodules between 1-3 cm via the airway.
This is a phase 3 study to evaluate zimberelimab (AB122) combined with domvanalimab (AB154) compared to pembrolizumab in front-line, PD-L1-high, locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC.
This study will evaluate using hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) along with binimetinib as an effective method for treating cancer. All patients will receive binimetinib at a standard dose approved for other cancers. The dose of HCQ will also be fixed based on ongoing phase I studies. Eligible subjects will have lung cancer that has a mutation in a key cancer gene called KRAS, and the cancer has spread to other parts of their body.
A prospective, two-arm, non-randomized, concurrently controlled, multi-center, open-label, treat and resect study following patients to 1 year. The study is designed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of the Aliya System for the ablation of solid tumors using pulsed electric field (PEF) energy delivery. The study is intended for adult patients with suspected or confirmed NSCLC 8th ed. Stage IA2, IA3 or IB (>1 to ≤4 cm solitary lesion) who are surgical candidates and have not received treatment for the index tumor in the last two years.
The main purpose of this study is to compare pembrolizumab/vibostolimab coformulation (MK-7684A) plus docetaxel or pembrolizumab/vibostolimab coformulation to normal saline placebo plus docetaxel. Participants with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and progressive disease (PD) after platinum doublet chemotherapy and treatment with one prior anti- programmed cell death 1 (PD-1)/ programmed cell death ligand 1(PD-L1) monoclonal antibody (mAb). MK-7684A is a coformulation product of pembrolizumab/vibostolimab. The dual primary hypotheses of the study are pembrolizumab/vibostolimab coformulation plus docetaxel and pembrolizumab/vibostolimab coformulation is superior to normal saline placebo plus docetaxel with respect to progression free survival (PFS) per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors Version 1.1 (RECIST 1.1) by blinded independent central review (BICR).