View clinical trials related to NSCLC.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of BL-B01D1 in patients with Metastatic or Unresectable Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) and Other Solid Tumors.
An interventional, prospective clinical performance study protocol, for the testing of DNA extracted from FFPE Fine needle aspirate samples, using the Idylla EGFR_IUO/3.20, from patients with Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer screened in AstraZeneca's NeoADAURA clinical trial (Protocol No. D516AC00001)
This study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of TY-9591 in first-line treatment of patients with EGFR-sensitive mutation-positive non-small cell lung cancer with brain metastases compared to Osimertinib.
This is a phase 2, open-label study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of combination of Apatinib and Fluzoparib with or without Adebrelimab in previously-treated TP53-mutant advanced non-small cell lung cancer.
Simultaneous radiotherapy followed by adjuvant immunotherapy is the standard treatment modality of unresectable stage III NSCLC. Our preliminary study confirmed that the treatment of CTV-omitted IMRT regimen did not compromise the PFS or OS and significantly reduced the incidence of severe radiation pneumonia and radiation esophagitis. The purpose of this study was to observe the role of radiotherapy modalities that omit CTV in the context of immunotherapy for NSCLC.
This study is divided into Part I and Part II. Part I is the food effect study. A total of 20 healthy subjects, regardless of gender, will be enrolled in a randomized, open-label, crossover design. Part II is the drug-drug interaction study, an open-label and sequential design. 32 healthy subjects are planned to be enrolled and divided into group A and group B. Group A is to evaluate the influence of itraconazole as CYP3A4 strong inhibitory on HLX208. Group B was to evaluate the effect of rifampicin as a strong inducer of CYP3A4 on HLX208.
China with high incidence of non-small cell lung cancer. In the past few decades, surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and other treatments were continuously improved, however, the mortality of lung cancer patients was not significantly decreased. For patients with locally advanced lung cancer, direct surgery is not effective. It is difficult to achieve radical resection by surgery merely, and even if many patients receive surgery, they may eventually have tumor recurrence and poor survival rate. Therefore, it is necessary to explore effective perioperative neoadjuvant treatment to reduce the risk of postoperative recurrence and improve the postoperative survival rate of patients. According to the reports, PD-1/ PD-L1 immunocheckpoint inhibitor may become a new method for the treatment of lung cancer. Preliminary clinical results showed that immunotherapy combined with chemoradiotherapy provided a synergies antitumor effect. Multiple clinical results showed that serplulimab provided higher overall response rate for advanced lung cancer. However, in patients with locally advanced lung cancer, the efficacy of serplulimab combined with chemotherapy for sequential radical surgery is still unclear. The purpose of this study is to observe and evaluate the efficacy and safety of serplulimab combined with chemotherapy in the neoadjuvant therapy of resectable non-small cell lung cancer.
Study CJB-101-01 will be conducted at multiple centers in the USA and Republic of Korea as an open-label safety and preliminary efficacy study of CJRB-101 in combination with pembrolizumab in subjects with selected types of advanced or metastatic cancer. The proposed study intends to address the unmet medical needs of low response rate and refractoriness to immune checkpoint inhibitors typically observed in this subject population by performing assessments of response, dose limiting toxicities, pharmacodynamic, and the effect on microbiome biomarkers at different dose levels of CJRB-101 combined with pembrolizumab.
This study will evaluate the safety, MTD and/or RP2D, PK, and clinical activity of the combination of adagrasib with nab-sirolimus in patients with advanced solid tumors/NSCLC with a KRAS G12C mutation.
The purpose of this study is to find out whether lattice radiation therapy (LRT) is an effective radiation therapy technique when compared to standard stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). The study will also study how the different radiation therapy techniques (LRT and SBRT) affect how many immune cells are able to attack and kill tumor cells (immune infiltration).