View clinical trials related to Lung Neoplasms.
Filter by:Patients with lung cancer have poor physical activity and increased sedentary behavior, with the presence of high levels of fatigue. A randomized controlled trial will be carried out to compare usual care versus a personalized exercise program in the community, in order to explore the changes on physical activity and sedentary behavior and its impact on cancer-related fatigue.
The management of lung cancer is a major public health challenge. Molecular anomaly testing is recommended from the early stages for optimal and personalized care of all lung adenocarcinomas and non-smoker lung cancers. The search for these anomalies relies on increasingly advanced and sensitive analysis techniques, particularly Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS), which can simultaneously detect various molecular abnormalities in both DNA and RNA, including point mutations, complex mutations, rearrangements, and amplifications. These techniques are predominantly performed on biopsy specimens embedded in paraffin. However, these biopsies may require invasive and sometimes iatrogenic procedures, and their feasibility, quantity, and quality of the samples can be limited. The turnaround time for analysis results from the time of biopsy is typically around 2 to 3 weeks. In recent years, alongside the improvement in the sensitivity of molecular analysis techniques, liquid biopsy has emerged as a valuable approach, particularly in the analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). ctDNA is a non-invasive diagnostic biomarker that has been validated for detecting targetable molecular anomalies similar to those detected by "conventional" biopsies. ctDNA can be detected in plasma through a simple blood draw, as well as in cerebrospinal fluid, urine, saliva, or any other "liquid" sample from the patient. The concordance between mutations identified in the tumor and those detected in the blood exceeds 90% specificity in numerous studies. However, the sensitivity of ctDNA detection varies depending on the stage of the disease and the sensitivity of the detection technique used. The utility of bronchial ctDNA is currently underexplored. However, there is a rationale for investigating ctDNA as close as possible to the cancerous lesion at the bronchial level. Bronchial ctDNA could play a role in molecular diagnosis for distal lesions not visible through endoscopy and could also help reduce costs and turnaround time for molecular diagnosis in larger tumors. The objective of this study is to evaluate the utility of liquid biopsy (ctDNA and ctRNA) during bronchoscopy in the molecular diagnosis and management of bronchial carcinomas. This is a prospective multicenter French study that will include 50 patients.
Aumolertinib (almonertinib; HS-10296) is a novel third-generation EGFR-TKI showing activity against EGFR-sensitizing mutations and EGFR T790M mutation. The third-generation EGFR-TKI osimertinib has been approved in the adjuvant setting. This study is to studying 3-year aumolertinib as adjuvant therapy to see how well it works in treating patients with resected stage IB-IIIA NSCLC harboring sensitizing EGFR mutations.
This is a prospective single-center, open-label, phase II study evaluating the efficacy of sintilimab plus anlotinib as a neoadjuvant regimen in the treatment of IB-IIIB resectable non-small cell lung cancer.
This study, known as LUNAR-2, aims to investigate the effectiveness and safety of using TTFields, delivered by the NovoTTF-200T device, concomitantly administered with pembrolizumab and platinum-based chemotherapy for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body. The primary goals of the study are to assess overall survival and progression-free survival. Secondary objectives include analyzing outcomes based on the specific histology (subtype) of the lung cancer.
This is a single-arm, sequential study assessing the efficacy and safety of SMET12 and Toripalimab combined chemotherapy in patients with EGFR positive advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) : first-line treatment or failed from first-line immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment.The primary objective is to evaluate the anti-tumor activity and safety of SMET12 and Toripalimab combined chemotherapy in patients with EGFR positive advanced NSCLC.
This study was designed to compare the efficacy and safety of I-DXd with treatment of physician's choice in participants with relapsed small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
Single-POrt Robotic-assisted thoracic surgery versus single-port video-assisted Thoracic Surgery major pulmonary resection for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (SPORTS trial): a single-center, a single blinded, randomized controlled trial
This is a phase 2 Study to investigate the safety, tolerability, and anti-tumor activity of golidocitinib in combination with sintilimab as the front-line treatment for patients with metastatic PD-L1 positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
The Window-of-Opportunity (WOO) Network is a collaboration among Ontario's doctors and scientists to conduct clinical trials in newly-diagnosed cancer patients before they have surgery with an initial focus on understanding how cancer drugs can impact the immune system. There is often a waiting period of two to six weeks between when a patient first receives a cancer diagnosis and their scheduled surgery. This period provides a unique opportunity to study tumours before they are treated, allowing scientists to explore new ways to identify cancer, measure how cancer cells respond to treatment, and understand how therapies work. WOO Network trials include drugs or treatments that already have been tested in other clinical trials or are already approved by Health Canada. The SuPERIOR trial is a WOO trial and it is designed for cohort of patients patients diagnosed with newly-diagnosed cancer patients with stage two or three non-small cell lung cancer. The patients who are enrolled in this trial will received combination of Non-ablative oligofractionated radiation (NORT) which is a low dose of radiation and one dose of Durvalumab, an immunotherapy drug before their surgery.