View clinical trials related to Small Cell Lung Carcinoma.
Filter by:GSK525762 is a novel inhibitor of bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) proteins. Trametinib is a potent inhibitor of the mitogen-activated protein kinase proteins (MEK1 and MEK2). GSK525762 and trametinib are critical for growth and survival of tumor cells. This will be the first study demonstrating the synergistic effect of BET inhibitor and MEK inhibitor administered together against tumor cell growth. This study aims to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, PD, and preliminary efficacy of combination of GSK525762 and trametinib when administered concomitantly to subjects with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and rat sarcoma virus oncogene homolog (Ras) mutated solid tumors. The study will be conducted in two parts; part 1 will consists of dose escalation and dose expansion cohorts and part 2 will consists of four disease specific cohorts (SCLC, Ras-mutated adenocarcinoma [RMAC] of the colon [Ras-mutated colorectal cancer {RMCRC}] and/or rectum, Ras-mutated non small cell lung cancer [RMNSCLC], Ras-mutated pancreatic adenocarcinoma [RMPAC]) and an optional "basket" cohort (Ras-pathway activated solid tumors [RAST]). Part 1 will focus on selection of the Part 2 dose based on safety/tolerability, PK, PD, and efficacy. Part 2 will investigate the overall response rate and clinical response. The total duration of study will be approximately three years (nine to twelve months for part 1 and two years for part 2). Approximately 138-156 subjects will be enrolled in the study.
The investigators hypothesized that local radiation therapy can enhance the effect of anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody through priming T-cell effector function against cancer cells. Described as above, The investigators concluded that modest dose of radiation to local site prior to immunotherapy is the best to enhance T-cell-mediated immunity. Accordingly, The investigators will investigate the combining effect of hypofractionated-sublethal dose of radiation therapy followed by anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody, atezolizumab, for SCLC patients who are recurrent or refractory for initial platinum-based chemotherapy
To explore the overall response rate (ORR) per RECIST 1.1 as assessed by investigators in subjects with refractory small cell lung cancer treated with pembrolizumab (Pembro) plus amurubicin (AMR).
Participants will be consented into the study after they are found to meet the study inclusion criteria. The clinical staff will schedule a tissue biopsy and a blood draw for the participant to give NGS(Next-generation Sequencing).One is according to the germline mutation data to screen susceptible gene in SCLC(Small Cell Lung Cancer); two is to explore the extensive consistency detection of blood and tissues in patients with SCLC gene mutation information; three is to conduct dynamic monitoring of blood ctDNA(circulating tumor DNA) in patients with SCLC during treatment, by changing the types of mutations / abundance (for example: the clonal evolution of typical samples analysis) and change of tumor load, , investigating the patients treatment effect , for the significant change of mutations, to study whether it can be used as molecular marker; four is to analyze of the molecular typing of SCLC, according to the clinical and pathological features of patients.
The aim of this study is the synergistic effect of cancer ablation and life information rehabilitation therapy on unresectable lung cancer.
This Phase 4, prospective, multicenter, non-interventional, regulatory post-marketing surveillance study will collect information on the the safety and effectiveness of atezolizumab under the clinical practice, and update the drug label approved by the MFDS in Korea.
This is a Phase IIb, multicohort, open-label multicenter study of combination immunotherapies in patients who have previously received treatment with PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibitors. All patients in Cohorts 1-4 will receive the combination treatment of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor plus N-803 for up to 17 cycles. Each cycle is six weeks in duration. Some patients who experience disease progression while on study in Cohorts 1-4 may roll over into Cohort 5 and receive combination therapy with a PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor, N-803, and PD-L1 t-haNK cellular therapy for up to an additional 17 cycles. Each cycle is six weeks in duration. All patients will receive N-803 once every 3 weeks. Patients will also receive the same checkpoint inhibitor that they received during their previous therapy. Radiologic evaluation will occur at the end of each treatment cycle. Treatment will continue for up to 2 years, or until the patient experiences confirmed progressive disease or unacceptable toxicity, withdraws consent, or if the Investigator feels it is no longer in the patient's best interest to continue treatment. Patients will be followed for disease progression, post-therapies, and survival through 24 months past administration of the first dose of study drug.
Phase I/II Study in Patients With Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) of Veliparib in Combination With Topotecan
Trial Design - Patients with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer are randomized to nivolumab/ipilimumab plus either sequential or concurrent stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). - The primary endpoint is the phase I safety endpoint of SBRT dose for each body site. - The same starting SBRT dose levels are used in each arm. If two or more patients experience a dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) at the starting dose level, then the reduced dose level will be used (Section 7.1-Page 72). - DLT is defined as any grade ≥3 toxicity possibly, likely, or definitely related to SBRT plus nivolumab/ipilimumab (the combination and not the individual components). - Irradiated metastases will be grouped into one of five locations, which have different SBRT doses, and the DLTs will be attributed to the relevant organ system. - The starting and decreased SBRT dose levels are found in Table 2 (Page 20). - SBRT will be delivered in 3-5 fractions over the course of 1-1.5 weeks. - Patients in the sequential arm will begin immunotherapy between 1-7 days after completion of SBRT - Given the accrual data for IRB15-1130, the investigators anticipate that approximately 1/3 of patients will contribute metastasis to 2 locations. Since there are 2 arms, and 5 metastasis locations with 6 patients per location for the starting dose level, this translates to 40 patients for the starting dose level, and another 40 patients should each of the 5 locations require de-escalation to the lower dose level. - Secondary endpoints include comparisons of efficacy and toxicity between the arms, as well as interrogation of changes in the immune microenvironment induced by the two approaches.
Protocol PEN-866-001 is an open-label, multi-center, first-in-human Phase 1/2a study evaluating PEN-866 in patients with advanced solid malignancies whose disease has progressed after treatment with previous anticancer therapies.