View clinical trials related to Small Cell Lung Carcinoma.
Filter by:This phase II trial investigates how stereotactic radiosurgery affects brain functions while treating patients with small cell lung cancer that has spread to the brain (brain metastasis). Standard of care treatment consists of whole brain radiation therapy, which targets the entire brain, and may result in side effects affecting the nervous system. Stereotactic radiosurgery only targets areas of the brain that are suspected to be affected by the disease. The purpose of this trial is to learn if and how patients' brain functions are affected by the use of stereotactic radiosurgery rather than whole brain radiation therapy in managing brain metastasis caused by small cell lung cancer. Stereotactic radiosurgery may help patients avoid nervous system side effects caused by whole brain radiation therapy.
This phase I trial investigates the side effects and best dose of BAY 1895344 when given together with usual chemotherapy (irinotecan or topotecan) in treating patients with solid tumors that may have spread from where it first started to nearby tissue, lymph nodes, or distant parts of the body (advanced), with a specific focus on small cell lung cancer, poorly differentiated neuroendocrine cancer, and pancreatic cancer. BAY 1895344 may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Chemotherapy drugs, such as irinotecan and topotecan, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Adding BAY 1895344 to irinotecan or topotecan may help to slow the growth of tumors for longer than seen with those drugs alone.
This phase I trial investigates the side effects of cabozantinib and nivolumab in treating patients with cancer that may have spread from where it first started to nearby tissue, lymph nodes, or distant parts of the body (advanced) and who are undergoing treatment for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Cabozantinib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as nivolumab, may help the body's immune system attack the cancer, and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Giving cabozantinib and nivolumab may shrink or stabilize cancer in patients undergoing treatment for HIV.
This study will collect de-identified tumor samples, with correlated clinical/demographic data and tissue histology, from patients selected or scheduled for pre-treatment tumor biopsy or who have had a recent pre-treatment tumor biopsy. These specimens and clinical data may be used in subsequent studies for the development and validation of a diagnostic test.
The purpose of this Managed Access Program (MAP) Cohort Treatment Plan is to provide guidance to the Physician for the treatment and monitoring of eligible patients diagnosed with BRAF V600E/K activating mutation-positive advanced NSCLC using trametinib/dabrafenib in the Cohort MAP CTMT212X2002I. The Physician should follow the suggested treatment guidelines. Furthermore, the Physician must comply with the MAP Agreement Letter and applicable local laws and regulations.
The purpose of this study is to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics, Immunogenicity and Antitumor Activity of AZD8701 Alone and in Combination with Durvalumab (MEDI4736) in Adult Subjects with Select Advanced Solid Tumors
The purpose of this expanded access protocol is to provide access to trilaciclib for chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression in patients receiving chemotherapy as a treatment for small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Patients will receive trilaciclib intravenously as a 30-minute infusion prior to chemotherapy dosing and on each day that chemotherapy is administered. Supplementary to providing access to trilaciclib, this expanded access program will also capture Real World Data to help inform subsequent trilaciclib development. Requests for access to trilaciclib will be managed by Bionical Emas. G1 Therapeutics will review eligibility of, as well as complete a medical review of, each patient access request.
This is a multi-center observational study of atezolizumab combination therapy in patients with unresectable, advanced and recurrent non-small cell lung cancer(NSCLC) or extensive disease small cell lung cancer(ED-SCLC). 800 patients in NSCLC cohort and 400 patients in ED-SCLC cohort will be enrolled in this trial to assess the efficacy and safety of this combination.
This phase Ib/II clinical trial studies the safety and effect of Gimatecan in small cell lung cancer patients who failed the first-line standard platinum-containing chemotherapy. The chemotherapy will be given every four weeks.
Thoracic radiotherapy concurrent with chemotherapy stands for the standard regime for limited staged small cell lung cancer. Involved node radiation(INF) replaced elective node irradiation(ENI) as the more popular since several trails compared the two regimes. simultaneous integrated boost IMRT becomes mature with advancing in IMRT and VMAT. The investigator hypothesis that SIB-IMRT can confine the dose for organs at risk to reduce the toxicities compared with routine IMRT in limited disease small-cell lung cancer.