View clinical trials related to Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of Tarceva in two groups of patients with non-small cell lung cancer who have not been pre-treated with chemotherapy. One group, consisting of patients who have never smoked, will receive Tarceva 150 mg/day, and the other group, consisting of current/former smokers, will receive Tarceva 150 mg/day increasing to a maximum of 300 mg/day. The anticipated time on study treatment is 1-2 years.
The study objective is to evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics (PD) of orally administered PLX8394 in patients with advanced solid tumors. An additional objective is to identify a Recommended Phase 2 (RP2D) for further evaluation in the Extension Cohorts (Phase IIa portion). The study objective of the Extension Cohorts (PART 2 portion) is to assess the objective tumor response and the PK, PD, and safety of PLX8394 when the RP2D is used in patients with advanced BRAF-mutated cancers.
This study is being done to evaluate the safety and efficacy of pembrolizumab (MK-3475) in participants with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumors that are positive for programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1): the hypothesis is that treatment with pembrolizumab will result in a clinically meaningful Overall Response Rate (ORR).
evaluate Erlotinib efficacy and safety as the 2nd/3rd line treatment in advanced or recurrent NSCLC with EGFR wild type and without c-met expression
This study is to examine which dose of YPEG-rhG-CSF, once-per-cycle, has similar efficacy and safety, comparing to PEG-rhG-CSF, once-per-cycle, in chemotherapy-induced neutropenia
Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is a common complication of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Bevacizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), has been shown to be efficient in suppressing the accumulation of pleural fluid. The other widely used treatment for MPE is recombinant human endostatin.
The logical next step is to integrate molecular profiling into the care of all patients with NSCLC.
Concurrent chemoradiotherapy is the standard treatment for locally advanced, unresectable non-small cell lung cancer, but carries a risk of radiation pneumonitis of approximately 30%, and is associated with a decline in pulmonary quality of life. Standard radiation planning aims to optimize dose to the anatomic lung volume, without consideration of the differences in regional lung function. Functional lung avoidance radiotherapy aims to reduce radiotherapy dose to regions of functioning lung, instead depositing dose in areas of lung that are not well-ventilated. Functional lung regions are determined using noble-gas MRI and co-registered to the radiotherapy planning CT scans. Functional lung avoidance radiotherapy has been demonstrated to be feasible, and this trial aims to compare outcomes between standard radiotherapy (with concurrent chemotherapy) vs. functional lung avoidance radiotherapy (with concurrent chemotherapy).
This 2 arm study will compare the efficacy and safety of treatment with erlotinib intercalated with platinum-based therapy or erlotinib along, as first line treatment in Stage IIIB/IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients With Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Mutation. Patients will be randomized to receive gemcitabine (1000mg/m2 iv) on days 1 , and cisplatin (75mg/m2) or carboplatin (5xAUC)on day 1, followed by erlotinib 150mg/day from day 15 to day 28 of each 4 week cycle for a total of 6 cycles,then followed by erlotinib monotherapy, or erlotinib 150mg/day .The anticipated time on study treatment is until disease progression, and the target sample size is 60 individuals.
- Lung cancer is one of causes of the malignant tumor-associated death on a global scale, in which the surgery is the only effective approach in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). As present, the total postoperative 5-year survival rate of NSCLC is 40%, while only 4%~15% patients can benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy[1]. American National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) manual recommends that adjuvant chemotherapy can be performed on NSCLC patients in phase Ⅱ~ⅢA. - In order to assure the necessity of adjuvant chemotherapy on NSCLC patients in phase ⅠB or which kind of patients would benefit from it after the establishment of new staging, a multi-subject group of lung cancer set up a perspective, randomized, open clinical trial to explore whether adjuvant chemotherapy was effective on NSCLC patients in phase ⅠB under new staging policy, and to collect the characteristics of patients who could benefit from the treatment and the better adjuvant drugs after operation.