View clinical trials related to Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:The overarching objective of this study is to close clinical knowledge and performance gaps by providing oncology clinicians with the latest advances and emerging research in the evidence-base and personalized treatment of advanced NSCLC patients. In addition, the research team seeks to meet quality measures relevant to value-based care delivery through IT infrastructure and clinical workflow processes. The research team also hopes to gain insights on clinician practice patterns related to advanced NSCLC, and the correlation between advanced NSCLC patients reported goals of care and advanced NSCLC patients' fit/frailty status and treatment decisions.
A Phase I, open-label, multicentre, dose-escalation study to investigate the safety, pharmacokinetics and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of AZD4785 in patients with advanced solid tumours where KRAS may be an important driver of tumour survival. Part A: Dose escalation in patients with solid tumours to evaluate safety, pharmacokinetics and maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Once the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) is established, a dose expansion cohort may be included in Part A, with up to an additional 6 patients to further explore the PK, safety, tolerability, and preliminary anti-tumour activity of the AZD4785 MTD for confirmation of the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D). Part B: Expansion cohort at the selected dose in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to evaluate PK parameters, safety, tolerability, and preliminary anti-tumour activity of the AZD4785 RP2D as monotherapy in patients with NSCLC. Approximately 20 patients with NSCLC (Two groups of approximately 10 patients each) with NSCLC will be enrolled to Part B. Group 1 patients will have an option to provide tumour biopsies and Group 2 will be required (mandatory) to provide paired tumour biopsies. Overall up to 12 patients in Group 2Part B patients will be required (mandatory) to may provide paired tumour biopsies. A third group of up to 20 patients with other tumour types and/or a potential different schedule may be added based on the results seen in Parts A and B and any other emerging data and may also provide biopsies.
The goal of this study is to find the maximum tolerable dose of radiation that can be delivered combined with chemotherapy (carboplatin & paclitaxel) in patients with stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
A study to evaluate the safety of Nivolumab in participants with advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer
The main purpose of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability and anti-tumor activity of the experimental study drug pembrolizumab (also known as Keytruda or MK-3475) in people with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) that has come back after radiation therapy.
This is a phase II single centre open label single arm pre-operative window of metformin treatment in stage I-IIIa Non small cell lung cancer. In which patients will be invited to participate by receiving Metformin treatment during 14 to 21 days at 850 mg BID until the day before surgery. They will be followed closely for any Adverse Events during treatment and 30 days after surgery. During treatment there will be no follow up tests except 1 fasting blood glucose at week 2 of treatment. Survival data will be prospectively gathered after study treatment has ended until death.
This is a single-arm phase II study of continuation immunotherapy with pembrolizumab following initial benefit (CR, PR, or SD ≥ 3 months) with a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor.
Phase II, single-arm, open-label multicenter study that assesses feasibility, safety and efficacy of combined neoadjuvant chemotherapy and immunotherapy with Nivolumab 360 mg IV Q3W + Paclitaxel 200mg/m2 + Carboplatin AUC 6 IV Q3W in resectable stage IIIA N2-NSCLC adult patients followed by adjuvant treatment for 1 year with Nivolumab 240 mg IV Q2W for 4 months and Nivolumab 480mg Q4W for 8 months.
This is a prospective study of ventilation image comparison for lung functional information incorporation in thoracic cancer treatment planning.
The primary objective of this trial is to demonstrate the effectiveness of the powered vascular stapler for transection of the pulmonary artery (PA) and pulmonary vein (PV) during Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Lobectomy.