View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:This is a study of brigatinib in adults with Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC). The main aim of this study is to learn about the time period in which the condition does not worsen after the participant has received brigatinib. Another aim is to learn about the overall rate of participants who respond to the treatment with brigatinib. Participants will receive brigatinib as part of their normal clinical practice. Data will be collected during regular visits to the hospital (a total of up to 12 visits is planned throughout study duration).
Early-stage non small cell lung cancer represents 20-30% of all non small cell lung cancer and is characterized by a high survival probability after surgical resection. However, considering stage IA-IIIA non small cell lung cancer, a relapse rate of about 50% is observed, with a different survival probability on the basis of tumor node metastasis status, although patients within the same tumor node metastasis stage exhibit wide variations in recurrence rate. There are currently no validated prognostic biomarkers able to identify patients with a high risk of relapse.
The reliable predictive markers to identify which patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer tumors will achieve durable clinical benefit for chemo-immunotherapy are needed. This study is a real world study, aiming to establish a multi-parameter model to predict the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitor(ICI) combined with chemotherapy, and to explore the correlation and predictive value of each single biomarker, so as to assist physician to select patients who may benefit for a long time as early as possible and guide clinical accurate treatment.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn evaluate the safety and efficacy of the addition of radiation therapy to all tumour lesions, to first line medical treatment with alectinib in non-small cell lung cancer harbouring ALK-rearrangements. The main aims of the trial are to evaluate: - if the treatment combination is safe - if the treatment combination can inhibit progression Participants who have responded to 1st line alectinib will be treated with consolidation radiation therapy to all remaining tumour lesions while continuing on alectinib until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity or another discontinuation criterion is met.
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.
The main aim of this study is to learn about the time between the start and stop of treatment with brigatinib in Chinese participants with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and who have been positively diagnosed with having the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene. Other study aims are to learn about the progression of NSCLC and participants' response to treatment with brigatinib.
This is Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, parallel controlled study designed to evaluate the Progression Free Survive (PFS) of TQB2450 injection combined with Paclitaxel Injection and Carboplatin Injection Followed by TQB2450 injection combined with Anlotinib Hydrochloride Capsules versus Tislelizumab injection combined with Paclitaxel Injection and Carboplatin Injection followed by Tislelizumab injection in locally advanced (stage ⅢB/ⅢC) and metastatic or recurrent (Stage IV) squamous NSCLC subjects.The primary endpoint is PFS assessed by IRC.
This study assesses for early signs of damage to the heart following chest radiation therapy using both imaging (cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and cardiac positron emission tomography) and changes in blood biomarkers. This study determines if any changes in the heart muscle can be detected either during the course of radiation therapy or shortly thereafter using specialized imaging techniques or blood tests. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging may be used to help provide information about changes in the heart structure and function following radiation therapy. Positron emission tomography looks at differences in how the heart takes up radioactive sugar which is injected into the vein to assess changes in heart function following radiation therapy. This study may help identify patients at risk of heart issues following radiation therapy to the chest and ultimately help in the development of more effective and safe treatments for cancer in the future.
This is a Phase Ⅰ/Ⅱa, multi-center, open-label study, aiming to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic (PK), and efficacy of BR790 in combination with anlotinib in adult participants with advanced NSCLC.
This clinical trial plans to assess to what extent the on-treatment circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) can predict the subset of patients with NSCLC who will respond to immunotherapy treatment only and which patients will need both immunotherapy and chemotherapy modalities for their treatment regimen.