View clinical trials related to Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung.
Filter by:Determine the feasibility of liver stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) given in combination with systemic therapy (immune checkpoint inhibitors) in adult patients with metastatic NSCLC with liver metastases.
This is a Phase 3, prospective, randomized, open-label, multi-center study that assesses the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant therapy with different cycles of sintilimab combined with chemotherapy for Resectable Squamous Cell NSCLC. This trial will also explore the biomarkers of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to see whether receiving local ablative therapy (LAT) when minimal residual disease/MRD levels are rising can reduce MRD levels and control metastatic non-small cell lung cancer/NSCLC longer compared to systemic therapy.
In this randomized, double-blind, multicenter, phase III similarity study, treatment naive, EGFR wild-type, locally advanced, metastatic, or recurrent non-squamous, non-small cell, lung cancer (ns-NSCLC) patients were enrolled and randomized (1:1) into TAB008 or Bevacizumab-EU groups. Patients received TAB008 or bevacizumab-EU 15 mg/kg intravenously plus paclitaxel/carboplatin for 4-6 cycles followed by TAB008 or bevacizumab-EU 7.5 mg/kg until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity or death. The primary endpoint compared the objective response rate (ORR) within 6 cycles as read by an independent radiological review committee (IRRC). Secondary endpoints compared disease control rate (DCR) Within 6 cycles, duration of response (DoR), progression free survival (PFS), a year overall survival rate (OSR), overall survival (OS), safety, immunogenicity, and steady state pharmacokinetics.
This is a prospective, non-interventional, national study planned at three centers in patients with non-curative NSCLC receiving immunotherapy. At present, PD-L1 expression or tumor mutation burden serve as surrogate parameters for response to immunotherapy. However, the problem for clinicians is that not all patients with positive findings respond to this form of therapy. Cell-free DNA (cf-DNA) can be detected in blood plasma. Tumor cells almost always have chromosomal instabilities (or "copy-number variations" (CNV)), which can be detected using next-generation sequencing (NGS), also in the cf-DNA. These CNV can be quantified and given as a cf-DNA copy number instability score (CNI value). TheraSure CNI Monitor is a highly sensitive method that can detect as little as 0.5% tumor DNA in plasma. In preliminary work in a cohort of 56 patients with various types of cancer (including: breast, colon, lung, ovary, melanoma) in advanced stages, the TheraSure CNI monitor was already evaluated in the monitoring of immunotherapy. In 51 of the 56 patients, increased CKD values were measured before the start of therapy compared to a normal group of 126 individuals. To predict the success of the therapy, further blood samples were used after the first and second therapy cycle and threshold values were set for the minimal expected decrease in the CKD value in the event of therapy response. A therapy failure could be predicted with a high positive predictive value, cases of hyperprogression could be detected earlier than by routine imaging. In addition, pseudoprogression could be distinguished from true progression using the CRF value. The CNI monitor on cell-free DNA is to be used prospectively in 170 patients. The primary objective of the study is the prediction of primary progression under immunomonotherapy (defined as PD within 6 months after RECIST) with a predictive value for progression (PPV) of ≥50%.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the performance of a PET/CT-based deep learning signature for predicting occult nodal metastasis of clinical stage N0 non-small cell lung cancer in a multicenter prospective cohort.
The purpose of this study is to find out if fluid rinsed from peoples' airways (bronchial washing samples) during routine surgery to remove (resect) their non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumors contains enough vesicles to do testing that may help the researchers learn more about their NSCLC.
This is a multi-center, retrospective study of ucEGFRmut (exon 20 insertions excluded) metastatic NSCLC osimertinib-treated as first EGFR inhibitor. RECIST and RANO-BM brain objective response rate (ORR) were evaluated by investigators. mPFS, mOS and mDOR were calculated from osimertinib initiation. Mutations found at resistance were collected.
This is an open-label, multi-center, Phase 2 study in subjects with treatment-naïve locally advanced (unresectable and unable to receive radical chemoradiotherapy) or metastatic PD-L1-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who have received systemic therapy.
The main aim is to evaluate sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) in adults participants with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertions mutations during the 5 years before data extraction date (from 1-Jan-2017 to 1-Jan-2022). Participants will not receive any drug. This study will only collect the data from the medical records via chart review.