View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:This is a phase II, open, single-center clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of JS001 combined with Axitinib in the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer without activated EGFR mutation, ALK fusion and ROS fusion after or during first-line chemotherapy. About 50 subjects will be included in this study and will be treated with JS001 combined with acitinib. Each cycle is 21 days.
This is a multicenter, randomized, controlled, phase II study assessing the efficacy and safety of Almonertinib compared Erlotinib or platinum doublet chemotherapy (carboplatin or cisplatin + pemetrexed) as neoadjuvant therapy to EGFRm+ IIIA-N2 NSCLC patients.
This study will compare maintenance therapy with anlotinib plus pemetrexed versus pemetrexed or anlotinib alone, in patients with Non-squamous Non-small cell lung cancer who have not progressed during first-line therapy with anlotinib + pemetrexed + carboplatin. The primary endpoint of the study is progression-free survival (PFS); the secondary endpoints are disease control rate (DCR), objective response rate (ORR) and overall survival (OS).
Accurate evaluation of activity status is an important part of the assessment of people with cancer. Clinician assessments currently used are valuable but have limitations; in particular, assessment only occurs when the patient attends clinic and is often subjective. Activity trackers, such as FitBits, give the opportunity to objectively assess activity status continuously, independent of clinic visits. Previous studies have shown that a reduction in 1000 steps while receiving cancer treatment is associated with an increased risk of hospitalisation but it is not known if using information from activity trackers to allow early intervention is feasible or if it can reduce admission to hospital and improve outcomes. The investigators propose a prospective feasibility study in people with advanced lung cancer or upper gastrointestinal cancers who are starting a new line of systemic anti-cancer therapy. Participants will receive a FitBit, which is a commercially available wearable activity tracker for the duration of their treatment or 4 months (whichever is shorter). Step counts will be monitored and a reduction in daily steps of >1000 from baseline will trigger contact by the study team and an ambulatory review. Participants will not receive treatment within the context of the study.
TKIs therapy is the first-line treatment of patients with EGFR mutation advanced NSCLC.However, some patients have poor prognosis of drug resistance in the early stage. The dynamic alterations of ctDNA-based EGFR mutation after TKIs treatment is a predictor of the efficacy of TKIs treatment, which can be used to identify this part of patients in the early stage.Drug resistance can be overcome when TKIs is combined with drugs in different mechanisms of action, such as chemotherapy and anti-angiogenesis therapy.Gefitinib is the first-generation oral EGFR TKIs. Anlotinib is a domestic oral small molecule inhibitor of multireceptor tyrosine kinase, which has extensive inhibitory effect on tumor angiogenesis and growth.Gefitinib combined with anlotinib is a new option in the treatment of patients with uncleared plasma EGFRm after gefitinib treatment.
The purpose of this study is to observe the clinical effect and safety of Recombinant Human Endostatin in non-small cell lung cancer with leptomeningeal metastasis
This project is to assess the immunogenicity, safety and overall survival impact of intramuscular injection of trivalent influenza vaccine in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor treatment.
This is a multi-center, single-arm, open-label, Phase 2 clinical study of Dacomitinib for EGFR Mutated Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) With Brain Metastases.
Analysis of Gut Microbiota in Patients With Brain Metastasis of Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Treated by Pembrolizumab Combined With Chemotherapy
In recent years, immunotherapy research has made great progress, especially the immunocheckpoint inhibitors represented by anti-pd-1 antibody have shown good efficacy in the treatment of malignant tumors, and some patients can achieve long-term survival. However, despite the encouraging clinical data, only a small number of people have benefited. Therefore, how to further improve the efficacy of immunotherapy and expand the benefit population has become the focus of this field. The applicant was previously published in Oncoimmunology (2017; E1331807) pointed out in the above article: MDSC is a group of immunosuppressive cells, the number of this group of cells in the body of cancer patients is more than normal, its presence affects the proliferation, activation and function of T cells, is one of the important factors affecting the efficacy of immunocheckpoint inhibitors. Therefore, ideal drugs used in combination with immunocheckpoint inhibitors should meet the following conditions: first, they can kill or inactivate tumor cells to release tumor-specific or associated antigens; Second, MDSC and other immunosuppressive cells can be eliminated. Third, the number and function of T cells were not affected. Gemcitabine is a synthetic antimetabolic tumor drug widely used in the treatment of locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. Myelosuppression is the dose - limiting toxicity of gemcitabine, which includes lymphocytopenia. Therefore, if the commonly used clinical dose gemcitabine is used in combination with pd-1 antibody, the effect of pd-1 antibody will be affected due to the reduction of lymphocytes caused by gemcitabine. Therefore, we speculated that the reduced-dose treatment of gemcitabine combined with pd-1 antibody might have synergistic anti-tumor effect on the second-line and above second-line treatment of non-small cell lung cancer with negative driver gene, and the adverse reactions were relatively mild. This study is a phase IV, open, non-randomized, single-arm, single-center study to investigate the safety and efficacy of half-dose gemcitabine combined with pd-1 antibody in second-line and above treatment of non-small cell lung cancer patients with negative driver genes. Fifty subjects will be enrolled in this study. The primary endpoint of the study was ORR, while secondary endpoints included DCR, PFS, and OS.