View clinical trials related to Lung Neoplasms.
Filter by:This is an observational, prospective, multicenter study conducted in the US to gather evidence in the context of lung cancer to complement the development of a digital solution. Patients initiating treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) will be prospectively followed to characterize risk factors, signs, and symptoms leading to onset, diagnosis, and treatment of pneumonitis/ILD should it occur.
The goal of this pilot clinical trial is to test a disease-tailored, mindfulness-based intervention (Mindful Self-Compassion for Lung Cancer; MSC-LC) in adults diagnosed with lung cancer who are experiencing stigma. The current project seeks to: - Evaluate preliminary evidence for the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of MSC-LC in reducing stigma for adults with lung cancer, compared to a waitlist control condition - Elicit interventional impact not captured through quantitative measures with qualitative data from purposively sampled high responders and non-responders from the intervention condition Participants will randomized to either the MSC-LC intervention (a 10-week, virtually-delivered, group-based psychosocial intervention focused on the development of mindfulness and self-compassion skills) or to a waitlist control group that receives a referral to an NCI list of helpful mental health resources in their community. Researchers will compare the intervention and control groups to see if the MSC-LC intervention reduces lung cancer stigma and increases self-compassion.
The Window-of-Opportunity (WOO) Network is a collaboration among Ontario's doctors and scientists to conduct clinical trials in newly-diagnosed cancer patients before they have surgery with an initial focus on understanding how cancer drugs can impact the immune system. There is often a waiting period of two to six weeks between when a patient first receives a cancer diagnosis and their scheduled surgery. This period provides a unique opportunity to study tumours before they are treated, allowing scientists to explore new ways to identify cancer, measure how cancer cells respond to treatment, and understand how therapies work. WOO Network trials include drugs or treatments that already have been tested in other clinical trials or are already approved by Health Canada. The SuPERIOR trial is a WOO trial and it is designed for cohort of patients patients diagnosed with newly-diagnosed cancer patients with stage two or three non-small cell lung cancer. The patients who are enrolled in this trial will received combination of Non-ablative oligofractionated radiation (NORT) which is a low dose of radiation and one dose of Durvalumab, an immunotherapy drug before their surgery.
This study intends to recruit ES-SCLC patients with response to standard first-line chemo-immunotherapy to assess the safety of receiving different doses of consolidative thoracic radiotherapy.
This is a descriptive observational study in which data are collected in an epidemiological manner. This study is not intended to alter or interfere with the current medical practice of the enrolled patients. Data will be collected in a forward-looking manner. This is a descriptive observational study in which data are collected in an epidemiological manner. This study is not intended to alter or interfere with the current medical practice of the enrolled patients. Data from patients on prior treatment will be collected retrospectively, and data from patients who will be treated later and included in the study will be collected in a prospective manner. The criteria for retrospective collection were consistent with those for prospective collection. Eligible patients will be enrolled after NGS analysis of tumor tissue and informed consent has been obtained. Information required for the study will be collected (every 3 months).
This study is a prospective, single-arm, multicenter, phase II clinical study to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of adebrelimab in combination with bevacizumab and docetaxel in patients with advanced non-squamous NSCLC after progression on first-line immunotherapy.
This is a single-arm prospective pilot study in a single institution. The target accrual is 200 participants of Korean, female sex, never smoker status, and family history of lung cancer. The study will aim to enroll 200 participants in two years.
According to an analysis by Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center patients who receive a target therapy having an oncogenic driver mutation live longer than those who do not receive it. In addition to that, therapies guided by analysis on mutations identified in ct-DNA had a favorable impact, allowing longer survival. All this suggests that the presence of a therapeutically targetable oncogene (oncogene addicted) allows target therapy, resulting in a longer life expectancy. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the frequency of patients with oncogene addiction in a consecutive series of patients with NSCLC afferent to the CRO. Oncogene addiction is defined as being carriers of one of the mutations among EGFR, ALK, RET, KRAS, BRAF, Her2, ROS1, MET or other mutations that become therapeutic targets under investigation.
This study is a prospective, single-center, randomized controlled trial to compare whether applying cognitive intervention therapy before and after surgery in elderly patients aged 65 years or older undergoing non-cardiac surgery can reduce the incidence of postoperative delirium compared to conservative treatment.
This is an open-label, single arm Phase II study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of adebelizumab combined with carboplatin/Cisplatin plus (+) etoposide and concurrent radiotherapy in the first-line treatment of patients with extensive stage oligometastatic small cell lung cancer.