View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:This is a prospective, randomized, controlled phase II clinical study for evaluating anlotinib combined with concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by consolidation immunotherapy versus concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by consolidation immunotherapy in locally advanced, unresectable NSCLC.
This clinical trial investigates the acceptability of electronic cigarettes (JUUL) for smoking cessation (quitting smoking) and the reduction of surgery-related complications in patients with newly diagnosed head, neck, or lung cancer. Smoking before surgery is associated with increased risk of complications during and after surgery. Electronic cigarettes are a type of special product that gives small, steady doses of nicotine to help stop cravings and relieve symptoms that occur when a person is trying to quit smoking. Stopping cigarette smoking before surgery may reduce the risk of complications during and after surgery in patients with head, neck, or lung cancer.
This is a single arm study, conducted at two centers, of neoadjuvant sotorasib in treatment naïve patients with stage Ib-IIIa NSCLC. The study will accrue 25 patients in all. Patients must have been deemed surgically resectable and physiologically fit for surgery by a thoracic surgeon prior to enrollment.
DELTA-2 is a phase 1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of ITIL-168 with pembrolizumab in participants with advanced cancer whose disease has progressed after standard therapy. ITIL-168 is a cell therapy derived from a patient's own tumor-infiltrating immune cells (lymphocytes; TILs).
This is an open label, randomized, Phase II multicenter study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of two different second-line strategies: After failure of first line mono-immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors (anti-PD-1/PD-L1), and subsequent 2 cycles of standard of care platinum-based chemotherapy, 2 treatment arms will be compared: Arm A (Experimental Arm): After randomization, patients will receive a combination regimen featuring a single, priming dose of tremelimumab together with conventional durvalumab dosing. Durvalumab maintenance therapy will subsequently be continued as study treatment for up to 12 cycles. Arm B: After randomization, patients will continue to receive another 2-4 cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy. Afterwards, patients will end treatment or receive maintenance pemetrexed therapy as per marketing authorization (depending on histology, maximum of 13 cycles) at the discretion of the investigator
Offering an early-initiated supportive care program to stage III NSCLC patients to prevent deterioration of performance status and increase compliance of patients that complete chemoradiation as well as the patients receiving 12 months of durvalumab.
This is a first-in-human, open-label, multicenter, dose-escalation and expansion study designed to investigate SBT6290 administered alone and in combination with pembrolizumab in advanced solid tumors associated with Nectin-4 expression.
Lung cancer is responsible for one of the highest incidences of cancer-related mortality globally, and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounts for the biggest subtype of lung cancer. In recent years, the use of immunotherapy has revolutionised the management of NSCLC, with better response rates and survival outcomes reported in the literature, compared to traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy. Despite this, doubts remain regarding the true efficacy of immunotherapy in patients > 75 years old, given that this age subgroup is mis-represented in prospective phase III trials, in terms of numbers and baseline functional status, compared to real-world experience. Furthermore, the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is associated with a spectrum of immune-related adverse events (irAEs), affecting a range of organ systems. Once again, there are doubts about the safety of the use of these agents in patients > 75 years old, and whether baseline performance status and comorbidities are good predictors of efficacy and safety outcomes in this elderly patient subgroup. Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) and the vulnerable elders survey (VES-13) are assessment tools that provide a good indication of functional status in elderly patients, in a similar capacity to performance status and comorbidities. This study therefore aims to prospectively examine patients > 70 years old with a diagnosis of NSCLC, commencing immunotherapy. It will assess CGA and VES-13 scores at baseline, and correlate this with certain outcomes such as the incidence of severe adverse effects from immunotherapy at 3 and 6 months, any admissions to hospital arising from immunotherapy toxicities (and the subsequent length of inpatient stay), and mortality within 30 days. In doing so, it will help to determine if CGA and VES-13 scores can be used as a reliable indication of possible future efficacy and toxicity outcomes in this elderly patient subgroup.
This is an Open-label, Non-Randomized, Multi-center Phase 2 study of YH001 in Combination with Toripalimab,The study is designed to determine the safety ,tolerability and antitumor activity of YH001 in combination with Toripalimab in subjects with advanced NSCLC and HCC.
This study enrolls patients with Non-small cell lung cancer and treats them with the investigational drug Bexmarilimab (FP-1305) plus standard of care Pembrolizumab to block Common lymphatic endothelial and vascular endothelial receptor-1 (CLEVER-1). Treating with an antiCLEVER-1 antibody, such as bexmarilimab, could lead to immune system activation, which, in turn, may lead to cancer elimination.