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Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.

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NCT ID: NCT00887549 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

A Study of Thymidylate Synthase Expression in Patients With Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Thymidylate synthase (TS) is a substance the body produces naturally. The purpose of this research is to determine if there is a link between TS production and how well patients respond to treatment of non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The aim for the future is that doctors could have a better understanding in advance about which patients might respond well to pemetrexed based on how much TS they produce.

NCT ID: NCT00883675 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Safety Study of Adjuvant Docetaxel-Carboplatin Treatment for Resected Lung Cancer

Start date: May 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether it is safe to treat lung cancer patients who have undergone an attempt at curative resection with the combination of docetaxel and carboplatin.

NCT ID: NCT00883480 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Individualized Treatment Based on Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Mutations and Level of BRCA1 Expression in Advanced Adenocarcinoma

SLAT
Start date: June 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a pharmacogenic, prospective, and multicenter study in patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma.

NCT ID: NCT00883181 Completed - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

A Study of Neutropenia and Anemia Management in Subjects With Solid Tumors Receiving Myelotoxic Chemotherapy

Start date: December 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a multi center international observational study of subjects receiving myelotoxic regimens, with an investigator assessed risk of Febrile Neutropenia (FN) ≥ 20%, for the treatment of solid tumors (breast, ovarian and lung). Approximately 100-150 sites will contribute information on 10-15 subjects treated at their institution.

NCT ID: NCT00881296 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Gemcitabine and Carboplatin for Elderly Patient With Lung Cancer

GEEP
Start date: March 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A comparison of biweekly combination chemotherapy (gemcitabine plus carboplatin) with weekly gemcitabine in elder patients (> 75) with previously untreated advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Primary objective is to determine the objective response rate (CR+PR by RECIST criteria) for biweekly gemcitabine and carboplatin combination chemotherapy versus weekly single gemcitabine as first-line therapy in elder advanced non-small lung cancer patients (> 76 years) who have received no prior treatment for non-small lung cancer. As secondary objectives, adverse event profile, tolerability of biweekly gemcitabine and carboplatin combination chemotherapy, progression-free survival and overall survival will be evaluated in both patients with biweekly gemcitabine and carboplatin combination chemotherapy and weekly single gemcitabine. The study hypothesis is that biweekly combination chemotherapy of gemcitabine plus carboplatin may improve the efficacy.

NCT ID: NCT00880971 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Postoperative Radiotherapy for Patients With IIIA (N2) Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Start date: February 18, 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Several important international randomized trials have shown that postoperative chemotherapy contributed to the improvement on 5 year survival rate by about 4% for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) after complete resection. But the overall survival rate was relatively low and the local recurrence was still the dominant failure pattern for stage IIIA (N2) disease even these patients received the postoperative chemotherapy. Several meta-analyses have shown that postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) has no effect on the survival improvement for patients with NSCLC after complete resection. However, sub-group analysis based on the same dataset of these meta-analyses showed that the PORT with conventional radiotherapy might be beneficial for stage IIIA (N2) disease. The 3D conform radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and intensity modified radiotherapy (IMRT) can increase the radiation dose to the target volume while decreasing the dose to risk organs comparing with the conventional radiotherapy. So it is expected that PORT using 3D-CRT or IMRT after postoperative chemotherapy will improve the local control and survival for stage IIIA (N2) NSCLC. Here, the investigators designed a phase III randomized trial to compare the 3-year disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) rates in patients with completely resected stage IIIA (N2) NSCLC who receive adjuvant chemotherapy alone or adjuvant chemotherapy plus PORT.

NCT ID: NCT00879866 Completed - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

EMD 521873 Plus Radiotherapy in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Primary trial objective in this single arm trial is to assess the safety and tolerability of Selectikine (EMD 521873) given in combination with and local tumor irradiation and to determine whether the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) is reached with EMD 521873 doses of up to 0.45 mg/kg. Secondary objectives are to evaluate PK, immunogenicity, overall response, changes in tumor marker levels and circulating tumor cell numbers, progression-free survival and overall survival. Also, to evaluate biological/immune responses to EMD 521873. NSCLC patients have to be stable (PR or SD) after first-line chemotherapy in order to be enrolled. A total of 12 to 24 patients are planned. Patients will remain on the dose throughout the trial. It is intended to administer at least 4 cycles (21 d each), or until progression or 2nd line therapy becomes necessary.

NCT ID: NCT00875901 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Proton Therapy for Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (LU03)

LU03
Start date: September 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a research study to determine if hypofractionated image guided radiation therapy (hypoIGRT) with proton therapy is a good way to treat early stage lung tumors for patients who will not have surgery. HypoIGRT delivers higher daily doses of radiation over a shorter period of time compared with conventional radiation. This is thought to deliver a more lethal dose of radiation to the tumor and is more convenient with treatment being completed within 2-3 weeks compared to the typical 7-8 week course of conventional radiotherapy.

NCT ID: NCT00874588 Completed - Clinical trials for Non Small Cell Lung Cancer

Peptide Vaccine Targeting to Cancer Specific Antigen Combined With Anti-angiogenic Peptide Antigen in Treating Patients With Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Start date: March 2009
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, immune response and clinical response of different doses of HLA-A*2402 restricted epitope peptides URLC10, CDCA1, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 emulsified with Montanide ISA 51.

NCT ID: NCT00874419 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Erlotinib Versus Gemcitabine/Carboplatin in Chemo-naive Stage IIIB/IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients With Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Exon 19 or 21 Mutation

ML20981
Start date: August 2008
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR TKIs) such as erlotinib have proved effective in second or third line therapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer(NSCLC).It is well tolerated without the side effects usually associated with chemotherapy. The mutations in EGFR exons 19 or 21 have been reported to be associated with efficacy of EGFR TKIs.Based on the encouraging preliminary results from the Spanish lung cancer group' prospective study reported that the efficacy of Tarceva as first line treatment for metastatic NSCLC patients with EGFR mutation would delay disease progression,prolong overall survival and be well tolerated, medium Progression-free survival(PFS) was around 12 months and OS reach 24 months,our study is designed to compare PFS between the patients with mutant EGFR treated by gemcitabine/carboplatin and those by erlotinib in the first-line setting. We assumed 11 months of PFS on Tarceva arm versus 6 months on chemotherapy arm with a=0.025(alpha-spend for an interim analysis), 80% power and 12 months enrolment period, 12 months FU duration to calculate the sample size. The sample size is 69 pairs. Considering about 10% drop-out rate, the final sample size is 152 patients.So, chemo-naive staged IIIb/IV patients with EGFR mutations in exon 19 or 21 will be enrolled into this open-label, randomized,multicenter phase III study.