View clinical trials related to Small Cell Lung Cancer.
Filter by:In this retrospective study, patients diagnosed with SCLC between January 2011 to September 2022 were identified from database of the Second Hospital of Shandong University. Following inclusion criteria should be met: (1) Had histologically or cytologically confirmed newly diagnosed SCLC; (2) No cancer treatment has been done before; (3) Complete clinical, laboratory, imaging, treatment data and follow-up information. The exclusion criteria included: Patients without complete records for pathological information, complete epidemiology and other key clinical information.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of Human Multigene Methylation Detection Kit (Fluorescent PCR Method) for help diagnose lung cancer by comparing with clinical standard method (includes chest CT examination or pathological examination).
LURBICLIN cohort will describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients who received at least one dose of lurbinectedin as part of ATU program. LURBICLIN will evaluate effectiveness and safety of lurbinectedin in real-world conditions.
CLINATEZO cohort will evaluate overall survival, real world progression-free survival, best response and duration of treatment in patients with advanced, metastatic Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) who received atezolizumab combined with chemotherapy part of the French Early Access Program (ATU). Subsequent treatments (treatment delivered immediately after treatment with atezolizumab and chemotherapy) will be recorded. Those outcomes will be correlated to clinical, pathological, and radiological characteristics of patients.
Study HC-404-FCP-2011 is a first in human, Phase 1a, multi-center, open-label study to establish the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and evaluate the safety and tolerability of oral dosing of HC-5404-FU in a dose-escalating fashion. Up to 36 qualified subjects at 3 to 5 US sites, who have specific tumor types of renal cell carcinoma (RCC), gastric cancer (GC), metastatic breast cancer (MBC), small cell lung cancer (SCLC), and other solid tumors (e.g., non-small cell lung cancer, colorectal cancer, carcinoma of unknown primary) with the exception of rapidly progressing neoplasms (e.g., pancreatic cancer, glioblastoma, hepatocellular carcinoma) will receive HC-5404-FU. Every effort will be made to ensure approximately 50% of all subjects enrolled will be subjects with RCC and GC. The starting dose level is 25 mg twice daily (BID), escalating to 50, 100, and 200 mg BID as safety allows, following the Bayesian Optimal Interval (BOIN) design. The safety monitoring committee (SMC) will evaluate the DLTs and cumulative safety and PK data at the end of each cohort. Based on the SMC recommendations after a comprehensive review of PK and safety data for 200 mg BID dose, higher dose levels will be evaluated, starting with 400 mg BID. The dose will escalate to 600 mg and then 900 mg following the BOIN design starting with 1 subject at each escalated dose, until the MTD is reached or the sponsor or SMC declares the dose most appropriate for clinical development. This Phase 1a will be expanded into a Phase 1b/2a study through a protocol amendment and will then assess the dose and tumor type(s) selected in Phase 1a as the most appropriate for further clinical development. Subjects will be dosed until unacceptable toxicity, disease progression per immune-related Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (iRECIST), subject withdrawal, any other administrative reasons, or after 2 years of treatment, whichever occurs first. Efficacy will be assessed via Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors 1.1 (RECIST 1.1); computed tomography (CT) scans will be conducted every 6 weeks. Safety, including occurrence of dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), pharmacokinetics (PK), and biomarker parameters will also be assessed.
The main purpose of this study is to assess efficacy, safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics (PK) of Berzosertib in combination with Topotecan in participants with relapsed, platinum-resistant small-cell lung cancer (SCLC). This study will be conducted in two parts: safety run-in part and main part. The safety run-in part will be conducted in Japan.
This is a Phase Ib/II, multicenter, open-label study to evaluate the safety and preliminary efficacy of TT-00420 tablet, as monotherapy or in combination regimens, in patients with advanced solid tumors.
In this retrospective study, the investigators determined the frequency of hyponatremia in small cell lung cancer and the prognosis. 126 (27%) of 466 patients were hyponatremic. Hyponatremia could not be corrected in 50.8% (n=64) of hyponatremic patients. Survival was found to be better in the group of whom hyponatremia was corrected.
This is a Multicenter, Non-randomized, Open Label, Multiple Dose, Multiple administration, Phase IIa Clinical Study Evaluating the Efficacy and Safety of LY01610 in Patients with Extensive-stage Small Cell Lung Cancer that Progressed after first-line Antitumor Therapy.
This study is a single arm, multi-center phase II study of durvalumab and AZD6738 combination therapy in subjects with relapsed small cell lung cancer (SCLC) as a second or third line chemotherapy.