View clinical trials related to Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:Analysis of driver gene variation in early stage non-small cell lung cancer
A Phase1/2a Study of Rigosertib plus Nivolumab in Stage IV Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients with KRAS Mutation who Progressed on First-Line Treatment
To determine the more effective dosing sequence of intermittent erlotinib and docetaxel for treating patients with the diagnosis of advanced Non-Small-Lung-Cancer.
This is a Phase II open-label, single-arm, multicenter, international study to evaluate the clinical activity of durvalumab in patients with Stage III unresectable NSCLC who are deemed to be ineligible for chemotherapy per Investigator assessment. Patients will be enrolled into 2 cohorts according to radiotherapy pretreatment dose (Cohort A: standard radiation therapy [60 gray (Gy) ± 10% or hypofractionated bioequivalent dose (BED)]; Cohort B: palliative radiation therapy [40 to < 54 Gy or hypofractionated BED])
This Phase II study is to determine the efficacy of split-course thoracic radiotherapy plus concurrent chemotherapy with or without consolidation immunotherapy for patients with local advanced non-small cell lung cancer.
Immune checkpoints inhibitors (ICI) are becoming new standards of care for Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC) treatment. To date, no powerful predictive biomarker of response has been found. The investigators hypothesize that metabolomics profile could represent a potent biomarker of response to ICI
This is a blood collection study being conducted to better understand and describe the immunological blood profile changes in patients with advanced non small cell lung cancer undergoing treatment with checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Blood will be collected from healthy volunteers and patients with non small cell lung cancer
The incorporation of PD-L1 testing into clinical practice has progressed at a rapid pace, and now offers an additional line of therapy for eligible patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer. The assay used to detect circulating levels of PD-L1 currently requires core biopsies, and is not approved to be used for specimens collected through a needle based cytological technique. Though endobronchial ultrasound guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) has markedly improved the manner in which patients are diagnosed and staged for lung cancer, alternative means of tissue collection may be mandatory to offer patients access to newer lines of therapy such as PD-L1 inhibition. EBUS-miniforceps biopsy may allow bronchoscopists to obtain core biopsy specimens through the technique of endobronchial ultrasound, so that more invasive approaches such as surgery may be avoided. Feasibility using this approach would indicate that all patients being staged with endobronchial ultrasound procedures would be candidates for PD-L1 testing and potential therapy. This study is proposed to evaluate the feasibility of using endobronchial ultrasound guided miniforceps biopsy (EBUS-MFB) to acquire tissue that is adequate for PD-L1 testing. Feasibility in this study is defined as the ability to obtain adequate material during EBUS procedures to perform PD-L1 testing.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of Sintilimab Combined With Docetaxel in Non-driver Gene Mutation NSCLC patients who failed with double platinum-based chemotherapy
The purpose of this research study is to study the effect of giving nivolumab with CCR2/5-inhibitor or anti-IL-8 before surgery, and after surgery, with the goal of determining if this medicine results in: 1. A significant immune response against their tumor (which the study team will see in the tumor that is taken out at the time of surgery) 2. Improvement in long term survival rates