View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:For unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC), the standard treatment at present is concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) followed by durvalumab consolidation therapy. The PACIFIC study indicated a significant benefit in progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Notably, the PACIFIC trial only evaluated patients who had received concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Many patients are unable to tolerate concurrent chemoradiotherapy because of a poor Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status and a high radiation pneumonitis risk for large tumors. Sequential chemoradiotherapy is therefore widely used in clinical practice for patients who cannot tolerate. In the preimmunotherapy era, CCRT showed a significant benefit in OS compared with sequential chemoradiation therapy, with an absolute improvement of 4.5% (from 10.6% to 15.1%) at 5 years. In the immunotherapy era, neoadjuvant immunotherapy plus chemotherapy resulted in significantly longer event-free survival and a higher percentage of patients with a pathological complete response than chemotherapy alone. Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate the ability of sequential immuno-chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy in patients with unresectable LA-NSCLC. Moreover, locoregional recurrence still remain the major causes of treatment failure in the immunotherapy era. Our previous study showed that patients with stage III NSCLC treated with hypofractionated radiation therapy(hypoRT) in doses up to 60 Gy at 4 Gy per fraction had promising survival and locoregional control rates. HypoRT may also act synergistically with immunotherapy to enhance immune responses. Thus, the investigators want to exploit the survival benefit effect of immuno-chemotherapy plus sequential hypoRT in LA-NSCLC. Based on these premises the investigators designed a single arm, phase 2 trial to determine the efficacy and safety of combining immunotherapy in association with standard chemotherapy and subsequently with hypoRT, followed by a treatment of maintenance with only immunotherapy. The study population includes patients with NSCLC not eligible for surgery. The trial aims to evaluate the clinical outcomes, disease control, and toxicities with this regimen. This study will last approximately 5 years and will include approximately 55 eligible patients.
Clinical study BCD-201-1 is a double-blind randomized study of the pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), safety, and immunogenicity of BCD-201 versus Keytruda following intravenous administration to subjects with advanced unresectable, metastatic, or recurrent melanoma and NSCLC. The study aimed to establish the equivalence of PK and similarity of the safety, immunogenicity, and PD profiles of BCD-201 and Keytruda.
This study is to assess the pharmacokinetics (PK) and safety of SC MK-3475A vs intravenous (IV) pembrolizumab, administered with chemotherapy in first line treatment of adult participants with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. The primary hypotheses of this study are MK-3475A subcutaneous (SC) is noninferior to pembrolizumab IV with respect to PK parameters.
This is a Phase II, single-arm, multi-center clinical study to evaluate the anti-tumor efficacy, safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of DZD9008 in participants with locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC carrying EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations whose disease has progressed on prior platinum-based chemotherapy
The purpose of the study is to separately assess the potential of dexamethasone, montelukast and methotrexate administration, prior to amivantamab infusion given through a needle in the vein, to decrease the incidence and/or severity of first-dose infusion related reactions.
This is a phase 1, multicenter, open-label, first-in-human study of YL202 conducted in the United States and China. The study will evaluate the safety and tolerability of YL202 in patients with locally advanced or metastatic epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-mutated NSCLC or hormone receptor (HR)-positive and HER2-negative BC, which have been heavily treated by standard treatment.
This pragmatic study looks to quantify the testing timeline, operational barriers, and outcomes of biomarker-guided therapy in a large, community-based, and largely unselected patient population with early stage and advanced stage, treatment-naive non-small cell lung cancer, whether squamous or non-squamous.
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A prospective, single-arm, non-randomized, multi-center, open-label study following patients with resectable stage IIB to IIIA non-small cell lung cancer after Pulsed Electric Fields (PEF) ablation who may be candidates for standard of care neoadjuvant use of checkpoint inhibitor (nivolumab) treatment plus platinum doublet chemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate BMS-986442 in combination with nivolumab (with or without chemotherapy) for its antitumor efficacy and benefit to participants.