View clinical trials related to Lung Neoplasms.
Filter by:Purpose : Non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is among the most common cancers in the werstern world. Patients with stage I have the most satisfactory outcomes. The gold standard for treatment is still surgery, but this approach has recently been challenged by hypofractionnated stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). Therefore, for patients who are not eligible for surgery due to their significant co-morbidity, or for those who refuse surgical resection, stereotactic radiotherapy is an efficient practical alternative. SBRT is well tolerated and efficient, in fact local control rate at 3 years reaches more than 90%. Most of guidelines recommand a dose between 48 and 60 Gy delivered in 3 at 8 fractions and 3 weeks. Biological effect depends on the dose distribution in time and decreases when the number of fractions or length of radiation treatment increase. Decreasing the length of treatment and the interval between fractions may improve efficiency of treatment and local control rate. Moreover, it may improve quality of life of patients. Nevertheless, an evaluation of safety of such shorter treatment course, with a phase I-II clinical study is needed.
In this phase II trial with single arm, we aim to investigate the clinical efficacy and toxicity profile of local radiotherapy on all disease sites for EGFR-mutant oligo-metastatic NSCLC (no more than 3 metastatic lesions) who did not experience disease progression after at least 3 months of TKI therapy.
This is a randomized, multicenter, double-blind placebo-controlled phase 3 study of efficacy and safety of BCD-100 in combination with pemetrexed+cisplatin/carboplatin compared to placebo in combination with pemetrexed+cisplatin/carboplatin in subjects with previously untreated metastatic non-squamous NSCLC. The main hypothesis of the study is that BCD-100 in combination with chemotherapy prolongs OS compared to placebo with chemotherapy.
This is a multicenter, single arm, phase II study evaluating efficacy in terms of RR in a cohort of NSCLC with MET amplification or MET exon 14 skipping mutation pre-treated or not with MET inhibitors.
TQB2450 is a humanized monoclonal antibody targeting programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1), which prevents PD-L1 from binding to PD-1 and B7.1 receptors on T cell surface, restores T cell activity, thus enhancing immune response and has potential to treat various types of tumors.
A single arm, open-label pilot study is designed to determine the safety, tolerability and effectiveness of personalized mRNA tumor vaccine encoding neoantigen in Patients with advanced esophageal cancer and non-small cell lung cancer
The study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of famitinib combined with HS-10296 in subjects with advanced EGFR-mutant NSCLC.
This study was a single-arm, multi-center, phase II study, which is aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CM082 combined with JS001 as the second-line treatment of advanced small cell lung cancer. Eligible patients will receive CM082 tablets 150mg once daily orally in combination with JS001 (240mg, intravenously) every 21 days. Treatment continues until disease progresses , intolerable toxicity, or withdraw.
This study was a phase I/II trial initiated by the investigator to evaluate the safety and tolerability of anti-PD-1 antibody-activated TILs combined with adjuvant chemotherapy in participants with stage II-IIIA non-small cell lung cancer. 20 participants were enrolled and anti-PD-1 antibody-activated TILs was infused into participants after the final cycle chemotherapy to assess the safety and disease-free survival.
The PIONEER Initiative stands for Precision Insights On N-of-1 Ex vivo Effectiveness Research. The PIONEER Initiative is designed to provide access to functional precision medicine to any cancer patient with any tumor at any medical facility. Tumor tissue is saved at time of biopsy or surgery in multiple formats, including fresh and cryopreserved as a living biospecimen. SpeciCare assists with access to clinical records in order to provide information back to the patient and the patient's clinical care team. The biospecimen tumor tissue is stored in a bio-storage facility and can be shipped anywhere the patient and the clinical team require for further testing. Additionally, the cryopreservation of the biospecimen allows for decisions about testing to be made at a later date. It also facilitates participation in clinical trials. The ability to return research information from this repository back to the patient is the primary end point of the study. The secondary end point is the subjective assessment by the patient and his or her physician as to the potential benefit that this additional information provides over standard of care. Overall the goal of PIONEER is to enable best in class functional precision testing of a patient's tumor tissue to help guide optimal therapy (to date this type of analysis includes organoid drug screening approaches in addition to traditional genomic profiling).