View clinical trials related to Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:The primary goal of this Phase 1 study is to characterize the safety and tolerability of tebotelimab and establish the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of tebotelimab in advanced solid tumors, and tebotelimab in combination with margetuximab in HER2+ advanced solid tumors. Pharmacokinetics (PK), immunogenicity, pharmacodynamics (PD), and the anti-tumor activity of tebotelimab will also be assessed.
Chiauranib , which simultaneously targets against VEGFR/Aurora B/CSF-1R, several key kinases involved in tumor angiogenesis, tumor cell mitosis, and chronic inflammatory microenvironment.
This is a 2-part, multicenter, open-label, randomized study of dinutuximab and irinotecan versus irinotecan alone in subjects with relapsed or refractory small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Part 1 of the study involves intrasubject dose escalation to evaluate the safety and tolerability of dinutuximab in combination with irinotecan. Part 2 of the study is designed to determine whether dinutuximab plus irinotecan prolongs overall survival (OS) compared with irinotecan alone. Subjects in Part 2 will be randomized in a 2:2:1 fashion to 1 of 3 treatment groups: (A) irinotecan; (B) dinutuximab plus irinotecan; or (C) topotecan. Randomization will be stratified by duration of response to prior platinum therapy (relapse-free period <3 months or ≥3 months).
A randomized, open label phase 3 study of irinotecan liposome injection (ONIVYDE®) versus topotecan in patients with small cell lung cancer who have progressed on or after platinum-based first-line therapy The study was conducted in two parts: 1. Dose determination of irinotecan liposome injection 2. A randomized, efficacy study of irinotecan liposome injection versus topotecan
This is a Japanese, multicenter, open-label, dose-escalation study. This is the first study to assess the safety and tolerability as well as explore the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and antitumor activity of rovalpituzumab tesirine in Japanese participants with advanced small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
APG-1252 is a highly potent Bcl-2 family protein inhibitor, a promising drug candidate which shown high binding affinities to Bcl-2, Bcl-xL and Bcl-w. The preclinical studies have shown that APG-1252 alone achieves complete and persistent tumor regression in multiple tumor xenograft models with a twice weekly or weekly dose-schedule, including SCLC, colon, breast and acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) cancer xenografts; achieves strong synergy with the chemotherapeutic agents, indicating that APG-1252 may have a broad therapeutic potential for the treatment of human cancer as a single agent and in combination with other classes of anticancer drugs. APG-1252 is intended for the treatment of patients with SCLC or other solid tumors. This is a multi-center, open-label, dose escalation Phase I study to determine the MTD and DLTs of intravenously administered APG-1252. After dose escalation to 240mg twice weekly, 2 dose cohorts two different dosing schedules including weekly and twice weekly will be assessed to evaluate for safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and preliminary anti-tumor efficacy. Treatment with APG-1252 will be administered to 30-60 patients at approximately 2 investigational sites in US.
The purpose of this randomized, open-label, 2-arm, phase 3 study is to assess the efficacy, safety and tolerability of rovalpituzumab tesirine versus topotecan in participants with advanced or metastatic SCLC with high levels of DLL3, who have first disease progression during or following front-line platinum-based chemotherapy.
To compare the effects and safety of Anlotinib with placebo in patients with small cell lung cancer(SCLC).
Chemotherapy still constitutes the backbone of small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) therapy, particularly in the extensive disease (ED) stage (ED-SCLC). Despite the fact that a substantial complete response rate could be achieved in SCLC patients receiving etoposide - cisplatin doublet, cure remains the exception. Overall survival in patients receiving this combination is 10 months and progression free survival 6.3 months. At time of progression two options are hitherto accepted: reinduction of carboplatin - etoposide doublet or, for patients unfit for reinduction, topotecan single-drug regimen. However, in both clinical cases, median survival hardly achieves 33 weeks. Consistent data using anti - PDL1 (Programmed death-ligand 1) or anti PD1 (programmed cell death 1) antibodies suggest that they are active as single drug regimens in many malignant diseases. Taking into account the rich tumor infiltrating lymphocyte in pathological specimens of SCLC, we can hypothesize that experimental use of ATEZOLIZUMAB (MPDL3280A) in patients is ethical pending that it demonstrates activity in the second line setting.
The purpose of the safety run in Phase I portion of this study is to confirm the recommended Phase II dose of ipilimumab and nivolumab among participants treated with combined thoracic radiation therapy (30 Gy in 10 fractions) and nivolumab/ipilimumab following standard treatment with 4-6 cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy. The purpose of the Phase II portion of this study is to estimate the 6-month Progression Free Survival (PFS) rate among participants treated with ipilimumab and nivolumab with thoracic radiation therapy (30 Gy in 10 fractions) after standard treatment with 4 to 6 cycles of platinum based chemotherapy.