View clinical trials related to Lung Neoplasms.
Filter by:Cancer patients are often given the choice of delaying or avoiding treatment as one of their options. However, there is not much information guiding lung cancer patients and their clinicians regarding this approach. Active surveillance is a way of either delaying or avoiding treatment and its possible side effects through carefully watching for changes in the tumor and considering treatment if there is progression. The purpose of this research study is to evaluate active surveillance and ways to better understand if and when to treat patients with stage IA lung cancer.
This study is a prospective non-randomised control study to evaluate the efficacy of a physical activity promotion program on the experience of physical activity in patients with stage III and IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with documented disease control (stable disease, partial or complete response defined by RECIST V1.1) at least 6 months after start of first line treatment. The trial will consist of 4 visits. An outpatient clinic visit in which the eligible patients are invited (V1), a screenings visit (V2), a third visit (V3) at which the patients will be divided into the intervention or the control group, according to owning a smartphone and their affinity with it, followed by the start of the intervention consisting of 8 weeks telecoaching by means of an application and step counter and a final visit (V4) 8 weeks after starting up the intervention.
From literature review, circulating tumor cell was demonstrated its possible role in disease relapse. It was rare nit could be identified in all lung cancer patients. In addition, circulating tumor cell usual aggregate to form circulating tumor micro-emboli and caused distant metastases. Therefore, circulating tumor cell could play a role in detect disease relapse and appropriate treatment could be given more earlier and further prolong patients' survival. However, the detail clinical significance of circulating tumor still remains unknown. The aim of this study was evaluate the clinical significance, including present timing, numbers, and correlation to disease relapse, of circulating tumor cell in lung cancer patients. The investigators want to clarify the clinical significance between circulating tumor cell and clinical presentation of lung cancer in order to establish new prediction model and improve lung cancer patients' survival.
An analysis of Low-Dose Cat Scan(LDCT) Screenings for Lung Cancer completed within the St. Elizabeth system from January 2015 until December 2019. The study investigator, or designee(s), will retrospectively review patient encounters, collecting data related to LDCT referrals and completions. Data analysis will focus on the subsequent imaging, procedures, reviews at The Nodule Review Board and Lung Cancers diagnosed as a result of the LDCT.
This study is a single center, minimal risk, physician initiated retrospective chart review. An analysis of treatment timelines for patients diagnosed with lung cancer within the St. Elizabeth system from January 2013 until study completion. The study investigator and designee(s) will review patient electronic medical records, extracting data related to the symptom presentation, diagnosis, and treatment of new diagnoses of lung cancer. Collected data will focus on dates of encounters, diagnostic imaging/procedures, and treatments, with data analysis evaluating time between care encounters and potential delays in care. The data will be further stratified based on system-wide changes implemented to improve efficiency, patient outcomes, and patient experience.
Retrospective inclusion of lung cancers developed in a context of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, diagnosed and / or treated in participating centers. The cases are recovered retrospectively from the records of the pulmonology and pathology departments of our various partners.
The investigators performed a multi-centered, randomized, placebo-controlled, prospective clinical trial on the effect of comprehensive rehabilitation program plus chemotherapy to improve quality of life(QOL) and long-term survival of postoperative non small cell lung cancer(NSCLC)patients with high risk stages IB to IIIA. The investigators plan to enroll 354 cases in 3 years (118 cases for chemotherapy plus rehabilitation training and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), 118 cases for chemotherapy plus rehabilitation education and TCM,118 cases for chemotherapy plus rehabilitation education and placebo), expecting that comprehensive rehabilitation program plus chemotherapy has a better efficacy on improving QOL and long-term survival.
Subjects will be eligible for this study if they are about to start on a drug called nivolumab for lung cancer. Some patients' cancers respond to nivolumab but a majority of patients do not. To better determine which patients will most likely respond to nivolumab or not, the investigators are testing an assay that tests biopsy tissue to determine if the subject's tumor will likely respond to nivolumab. The main purpose of this research study is to see if this specialized test can help identify people with locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer who are more likely to benefit from treatment with nivolumab. The results of the tests will not affect whether or not subjects receive nivolumab but may help identify future patients who are more likely to benefit from nivolumab. The study assay is extra and experimental.
The investigators performed a multi-centered, randomized, placebo-controlled, prospective clinical trial on the effect of comprehensive rehabilitation program to improve quality of life(QOL) and long-term survival of postoperative patients with early lung cancer. The investigators plan to enroll 236 cases in 3 years (118 cases for rehabilitation training plus traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), 118 cases for rehabilitation education plus placebo), expecting that comprehensive rehabilitation program has a better efficacy on improving QOL and long-term survival.
This randomized pilot phase II trial studies the effect of YQ1, a herbal medicine, with cisplatin-based chemotherapy on gut microbiota and immune response in patients with EGFR/ALK wild type non-small cell lung cancer, stage IIIB-IV.