View clinical trials related to NSCLC.
Filter by:Seagull is a phase Ⅱ study designed to investigate the efficacy and safety of MRD-guided adjuvant tislelizumab and chemotherapy vs adjuvant tislelizumab and chemotherapy in patients with resectable NSCLC
A Phase 1 SAD/MAD dose escalation and expansion study to determine the safety and effectiveness of ²¹²Pb-DOTAM-GRPR1 in subjects with various GRPR-expressing Tumors
This study will evaluate the safety and tolerability of LYL797, a ROR1-targeted CAR T-cell therapy, in patients with ROR1+ relapsed or refractory triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) or non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The first part of the study will determine the safe dose for the next part of the study, and will enroll TNBC and NSCLC patients. The second part of the study will test that dose in additional TNBC and NSCLC patients.
This is a Phase 1/2, first-in-human, open-label, dose escalation and dose-expansion study of E-602, administered alone and in combination with cemiplimab.
BDTX-1535-101 is an open-label, Phase 1 dose escalation and Phase 2 multiple cohort study designed to evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), optimal dosage, central nervous system (CNS) activity, and antitumor activity of BDTX-1535. The study population comprises adults with either advanced/metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with non-classical or acquired epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) resistance (EGFR C797S) mutations with or without CNS disease (in Phase 1 and Phase 2), or glioblastoma (GBM) expressing EGFR alterations (Phase 1 only). All patients will self-administer BDTX-1535 monotherapy by mouth in 21-day cycles. Phase 1 enrollment is now complete. Phase 2 is currently enrolling.
Outcome for patients diagnosed with advanced lung cancer remains poor; alternative treatment options are urgently needed. Studies in other metastatic cancers indicate radiotherapy to the primary tumour can improve outcomes. The investigators postulate this will also be observed in lung cancer patients. The aim of this pilot study is to assess the safety and feasibility of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) to the lung primary prior to standard of care (SoC) systemic therapy in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Forty patients with advanced (Stage IV) NSCLC will be recruited across the five Peter Mac campuses. Patients will be randomised to receive SoC systemic therapy with or without radiotherapy to the lung primary. Radiotherapy will be delivered before cycle 3 of SoC systemic therapy. Biospecimens will be collected for future translational research. The primary outcome of the study (feasibility of the protocol) will be assessed by the ability to deliver radiotherapy to the lung cancer primary, whilst meeting dose constraints. The study will also 1) evaluate proportion of patients who are willing to be randomised; 2) describe toxicity during the follow up period in each arm; 3) describe progression free survival.
Phase I Part : Confirm the safety of GAIA-102 alone or GAIA-102 with pembrolizumab for advanced / relapse non-small cell lung cancer, and decide recommended dose for Phase II. Phase II Part : Explore the efficacy and safety of GAIA-102 alone or GAIA-102 with pembrolizumab for advanced / relapse non-small cell lung cancer at the recommended dose of GAIA-102 decided in the Phase I part.
The objective of this study is to assess safety and efficacy of BA3071 in solid tumors
This is a single-armed study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of adjuvant targeted-therapy in patients with epidermal growth factor receptor mutation positive stage IB-IIA non-small cell lung carcinoma and high-risk of recurrence following complete tumor resection. The primary endpoint: 2-year DFS rate; The second endpoint: DFS
Prognosis of resectable early stages NSCLC might be improved by a better knowledge of post-operative minimal residual disease (MRD). This could be achieved by studying patient with stage I to IIIA completely resected-NSCLC, comparing qualitative and quantitative features of pre- and post-operative circulating cell-free DNA (cirDNA), using MiTest. We assume that the evolution of the parameters of MiTest and relapse rate after surgery are related and expect to prove that normalization of MiTest at one month after surgery is a prognostic factor of reduced relapse at one year.