View clinical trials related to Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:This clinical study is looking at the combination of two experimental drugs called tepotinib and pembrolizumab. Pembrolizumab, also known as Keytruda, is licenced and available by prescription to treat a variety of cancers. Tepotinib is currently licensed in the UK for use in non-small cell lung cancer (NCSLC) and is being investigated for this purpose. Cancer immunotherapy drugs hold great promise but still do not work for many patients. Laboratory studies on cancers that do not respond well to immunotherapy reveal that most of these tumours do not have any immune cells. This suggests that the cancer has successfully hidden itself and avoided being recognised by the immune system. This study aims to use a novel approach using a targeted drug, tepotinib, to target the gene involved with NSCLC. Tepotinib is a type of drug called a kinase inhibitor. Kinase inhibitors are a newer type of drug being used to try to treat cancers. They act by blocking some of the chemical messengers that are part of the signalling process within cancer cells that control their growth. Tepotinib is used in adults to treat NSCLC that can have certain abnormal changes in the mesenchymal-epithelial transition factor gene (MET) and which has spread and/or cannot be removed by surgery. The changes in the MET gene can make an abnormal protein which can lead to uncontrolled cell growth and cancer. By blocking this abnormal protein, tepotinib may slow or stop the cancer from growing as well as potentially shrinking the cancer. This study will include patients with and without the MET exon 14 mutations. In this clinical study, the investigators aim to test our ideas in a small number of people for the first time, specifically in those patients with cancers which do not respond to cancer immunotherapy.
This is an open-label, randomized, non-comparative, multicentre, phase II study in which NSCLC patients who have progressed following chemotherapy and immunoptherapy are randomized to receive treatment with either paclitaxel and bevacizumab (Arm A), or paclitaxel, bevacizumab and atezolizumab (Arm B). An estimated 156 patients (52 in Arm A, 104 in Arm B) will be enrolled at approximately 40 centres. Patients will be treated until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, withdrawal of consent or another discontinuation criterion is met. For patients in Arm B, continuation of atezolizumab beyond progression is permitted, at the investigator's discretion, if there is evidence of continued clinical benefit. The null hypothesis is progression free survival at 6 months ≤ 50% for Arm B, which is considered not sufficiently clinically meaningful to warrant further study. The alternative hypothesis is that 66% or more of patients in Arm B would achieve progression free survival at 6 months.
This is a multi-center, open-label, dose-escalation and cohort-expansion phase I clinical study to evaluate the safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics profile, efficacy and immunogenicity of IMM2520 in subjects with advanced solid tumors.
Medical study participation percentages haven't always been fully representative of a given demographic. The goal is to find out which aspects of a clinical trial may make it more difficult for patients to take part or see it through. Participating in an observational clinical trial may help patients with non-small cell lung cancer since it advances medical knowledge and may improve treatment choices in the future.
This is a prospective, pilot, single-arm, single-center study exploring the efficacy and safety of savolitinib plus docetaxel as second-line therapy in patients with MET overexpressed, EGFR/ALK/ROS1/MET ex14m-wildtype advanced NSCLC. Participants will receive treatment of docetaxel (60 mg/m2, ivgtt, q3w) in combination with savolitinib (300mg or 200mg according to safety run-in recommendation, p.o., BID) after informed consent signed. Treatment will continue until either objective disease progression, unacceptable toxicity occurs, consent is withdrawn, other discontinuation criterion is met, or study completion.
This is a clinical trial from Eastern Cooperative Thoracic Oncology Project (ECTOP), numbered as ECTOP-1013. The purpose of this neoadjuvant and adjuvant study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Serplulimab and chemotherapy in treating resectable Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer(NSCLC).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of tobemstomig (RO7247669) in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy compared with pembrolizumab plus platinum-based chemotherapy in participants with previously untreated, locally advanced, unresectable (Stage IIIB/IIIC) or metastatic (Stage IV) non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who are not eligible to receive curative surgery and/or definitive chemoradiotherapy.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, immune response and preliminary anti-tumor activity of RO7515629 alone in participants with advanced or metastatic solid tumors expressing human leukocyte antigen G (HLA-G).
There is currently a lack of published HER3 expression prevalence data among non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. The estimation of HER3 expression prevalence in this population using archival tissue samples and the assessment of associated patient characteristics in real world (RW) data will ultimately inform clinical strategy and increase awareness among health care providers (HCPs) and the greater medical community to improve patient care.
For unresectable locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer, chemoradiotherpay plus immunotherapy is recommended by PACIFIC trial. However, it is unclear whether surgery can provide survival benefit for patients with tumors initially unresectable transformed into resectable ones after chemoimmunotherapy. This trial aims to investigate the efficacy and safety of the therapeutic regimen of chemoimmunotherapy plus surgery.