View clinical trials related to Lung Neoplasms.
Filter by:The primary objectives of this study are: Part 1: To compare the overall survival (OS) of cemiplimab/chemo-f and cemiplimab/chemo-l/ipi versus platinum-based doublet chemotherapy in the first-line treatment of patients with advanced squamous or nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with tumors expressing PD-L1 in <50% of tumor cells. Part 2: To compare the OS of cemiplimab/chemo-f with placebo/chemo-f in the first-line treatment of patients with advanced squamous or non-squamous NSCLC irrespective of PD-L1 expression. The key secondary objectives are: Part 1: To compare the progression-free survival (PFS) and objective response rate (ORR) of cemiplimab/chemo-f and cemiplimab/chemo-l/ipi versus chemo-f in the first-line treatment of patients with advanced squamous or non-squamous NSCLC and tumors expressing PD-L1 in <50% of tumor cells. Part 2: To compare the PFS and ORR of cemiplimab/chemo-f versus placebo/chemo-f in the first-line treatment of patients with advanced squamous or non-squamous NSCLC irrespective of PD-L1 expression.
Although EGFR-TKIs such as gefitinib, erlotinib or afatinib are recommended as first-line therapy in patients with advanced, recurrent or metastatic nonsquamous NSCLC patients who have known active EGFR mutation and achieved response to EGFR TKIs experience disease progression eventually with 10-14 moths of median progression free survival.6 Platinum-doublets combination chemotherapy remains standard of care for patients with progressive disease. However, patients may derive benefit from EGFR TKIs after RECIST-assessed progression especially for those who experience slow progression. And previous report suggested that premature discontinuation of EGFR TKIs has resulted in rapid progression in symptoms and tumor growth.7 Recently, a prospective phase II single arm study in Asian patients with EGFR mutation-positive NSCLC to determine the continuation of erlotinib beyond progression judged by investigators showed that additional PFS of 3.1 months can be achieved with continuation of erlotinib without serious additional toxicities.8 Until now, no prospective study has been conducted for gefitinib. In this study the continuation of gefitinib beyond RECIST progression will be investigated to determine the clinical outcomes including the duration of treatment and safety. This is a single-arm phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of continuation of gefitinib in EGFR mutant NSCLC patients who experience RECIST progression. Based on the results of "ASPIRATION" study, the median PFS for continuation of gefitinib will be around 3 months. The study treatment will be of no interest if the true median PFS is 2.5 months or shorter. In contrast, it will be of interest if the true median PFS is 3.5 months or longer. Considering 1 sided alpha of 0.05 and 90% of power, 95 patients are required. A total of 100 patients will be needed considering 5% of drop-out rate. 6 months of accrual and additional 6 months of follow-up will be assumed for this study. Patients will be treated 250 mg/day of gefitinib orally (1 cycle for 28 days). Cycles were repeated until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or until the patient or the investigator requested therapy discontinuation.
This is a Phase 1B study designed to assess the safety and tolerability of LYC-55716 given in combination with pembrolizumab to subjects with metastatic NSCLC, and to assess the combination for biologic and clinical activity in NSCLC.
This research study is studying a combination of two targeted therapies as a possible treatment for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) with an EGFR mutation. The drugs involved in this study are: - Osimertinib (Tagrisso) - Selumetinib
This research study is studying stereotactic radiation (focused/pinpoint radiation that targets each individual tumor but not the surrounding brain) instead of whole-brain radiation (radiation targeting the entire brain) as a possible treatment for patients with small cell lung cancer and 1-10 brain metastases. The intervention involved in this study is: -Stereotactic (focused, pinpoint) radiation
In the SAMSON-2 study, the proposed biosimilar HD204 will be compared to its reference product EU-licensed Avastin®. The aim of the study is to demonstrate equivalence of HD204 and EU-licensed Avastin® in terms of efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity.
To estimate the incidence of Early Onset Pulmonary Events (EOPEs), defined as the proportion of participants with a peak reduction in DLCO of 20% or greater after commencing brigatinib at 90mg QD.
The purpose of this study is to confirm the safety and efficacy of Apatinib Plus Etoposide Capsule as the Therapy of Advanced Small Cell Lung Cancer.
This is a single arm, multi-centre, phase II open label study of nivolumab with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for early stage non-small cell lung cancer. SBRT will be delivered in either 3 or 5 fractions for peripheral disease or 8 fractions in central disease. A flat dose of 240 mg nivolumab infusion will begin after the final fraction of SBRT, within 24 hours and typically on the same day. Nivolumab will subsequently be given every 2 weeks at a flat dose of 240 mg for a further 13 cycles followed by Nivolumab 480mg Q4W for 7 cycles until 20 cycles in total are complete, unless any study drug discontinuation criteria are met. Treatment (20 cycles) will take a minimum of 1 year to complete but may exceed this timeframe if treatment delays are encountered. (Patients who have enrolled on Nivolumab Q2W 240mg regimen for 26 cycles and are beyond cycle 14 will receive 26 cycles Q2W in total to complete treatment). Assessment of toxicities will be performed at each clinic visit during treatment, at 30 days after the final nivolumab infusion and until 100 days after the final nivolumab infusion. Changes in spirometry values and PFTs will be assessed throughout the trial. Relapse rates will be assessed with staging CT scans at 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months post SBRT. An exploratory assessment will be made of the effect pre-treatment pulmonary function tests (PFTs) have on outcome measures.
The main purpose of this study is to see if the combination of nivolumab, ipilimumab and nintedanib is effective in people with non- small cell lung cancer. Researchers also want to find out if the combination of nivolumab, ipilimumab and nintedanib is safe and tolerable.