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Browse 4,288 clinical trials for lung cancer. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT04071418
Patients with recurrence after radiotherapy are often encountered in clinical practice.Patients with recurrence after radiotherapy are less likely to undergo surgery or secondary radiotherapy, and the guidelines recommend only systemic therapy, although the effective rate is relatively low.For patients with local recurrence without distant metastasis, local treatment is still significant.Radioactive I-125 Seed Implantation (RISI) treatment is to I-125 Radioactive nuclide directly inside the implanted tumors, make its rays to continuous destruction of tumor cells, have inside the tumor target high dose, low dose of normal tissue around, and its radiation is low dose rate, in theory, more conducive to the protection of the normal tissue, more suitable for salvage treatment of recurrence after radiotherapy lesions.Some retrospective studies on RISI treatment of NSCLC showed that the local control rate was up to 25%-80%, and there were few reports of toxic and side effects, suggesting that it had good efficiency and safety.Therefore, for patients with recurrent NSCLC after chest radiotherapy, RISI may be considered.And template technology, 3 d printing is a new kind of technology in recent years, can be individualized and human body surface, the guide posts on the the direction of the puncture needle can be accurately controlled, the current data show that in the template with CT guided by solid tumors as well had significantly higher accuracy, as the actual target dose of basic postoperative can reach the design request of the preoperative planning, so the application of 3D printing template helps to further improve the operation efficiency and safety, also has potential promotion effect to curative effect.The purpose of this study was: (1) to observe the efficacy, toxic and side effects of RISI in the treatment of recurrent NSCLC after radiotherapy under the guidance of 3D printing template assisted CT, and to evaluate its safety and effectiveness;(2) to explore the relationship between the efficacy, toxicity and side effects of RISI dose in the treatment of recurrent NSCLC after radiotherapy;(3) analyze the relevant influencing factors affecting the effect/toxicity of RISI in the treatment of recurrent NSCLC after radiotherapy.
NCT03646994
This study was designed to explore the efficacy and safety of Crizotinib as a first-line treatment for advanced NSCLC with ROS1 rearrangement positive mutation in the real world, explore the new drug resistance mechanism of ROS1 under Crizotinib treatment and the consistency of plasma and tissue detection driving genes, and finally evaluate the mutation spectrum of plasma dynamic detection driving genes. In predicting the risk of disease progression.
NCT03646968
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the Effectiveness and Safety of Anlotinib combined with Docetaxel in Progress after First line Standard Cheomotherapy in advanced non-driver mutation non- squamous non-small cell lung cancer
NCT03647592
This study aims to explore the efficacy and safety of Erlotinib/Gefitinib combined with bevacizumab in the real world for advanced non-squamous cell lung cancer with EGFR mutation, explore new drug resistance mechanisms under the A+T regimen and consistency between plasma and tissue detection driving genes, and finally assess the predictive value of plasma dynamic detection driving gene mutation profiles in predicting disease. The role of disease progression risk.
NCT04322591
This study aims to explore the efficacy and safety of chemotherapy or chemotherapy plus PD-1 antibody in RET Fusion Positive Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer.
NCT05991180
This is a descriptive observational study, in which data are collected in an epidemiological fashion and prospective. This study does not intend to intervene the current medical practice of the recruited patients.
NCT04187872
This is an open-label, historically controlled pilot study investigating the immune effect of Laser Interstitial ThermotHerapy (LITT)+ pembrolizumab in adult patients with a primary cancer approved by the FDA for treatment with an immune-checkpoint inhibitor who have recurrent brain metastasis after prior stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).
NCT03123783
This study is a Phase 1-2 open-label dose escalation study of the immuno-activating monoclonal antibody APX005M administered in combination with nivolumab to adult subjects with non-small cell lung cancer or metastatic melanoma. The Phase 1 portion is intended to establish the maximum tolerated dose and the recommended phase 2 dose of APX005M when administered in combination with nivolumab. The Phase 2 portion of the study will evaluate safety and efficacy of the combination.
NCT03256981
HALT is a phase II, randomised multi-centre study with integrated seamless continuation to phase III trial following acceptable safety and feasibility assessment. HALT aims to recruit 110 patients with mutation positive advanced NSCLC with oligoprogressive disease (OPD) following initial response to a Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor (TKI).
NCT03499678
A central challenge in the fight against lung cancers is how to detect disease in a noninvasive manner before it is detectable by imaging methods. Although inroads have been made with more sensitive imaging techniques for earlier detection of breast and lung cancers, these techniques are limited by the size of lesion that could be detected. Alternatively, several blood proteomic biomarkers have been proposed but none offer as of yet sufficient predictive power. Consequently, effective non-invasive tools as prognostic indicators and biomarkers of lung cancer is urgently needed. The purpose of this study is to develop and test non-invasive biomarkers based on methylation changes in PBMC and circulated tumor DNA in lung cancer patients.
NCT02379039
The study's aim is to define imaging and molecular bio-markers for prediction of radiotherapy response of squamous cell carcinomas, in an early treatment phase.
NCT02950337
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in both men and women in the United States. In 2014, an estimated 224,210 men and women were diagnosed with carcinoma of the lung and bronchus, resulting in 159,260 deaths. Per the current National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines, the standard of care for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is lobectomy with lymph node dissection. Historically, medically inoperable early-stage NSCLC patients have been offered definitive external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) as primary management but, overall, studies have consistently shown poor patient outcomes. Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is a technique which delivers very high doses of radiation per fraction over one to five fractions to precisely defined volumes with steep dose gradients. SBRT is commonly utilized for the treatment of biopsy-proven early stage NSCLC in the medically inoperable patient.
NCT03219268
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.
NCT05465590
The study will evaluate the pharmacokinetics (PK) and safety of a single intravenous (IV) dose of 0.3 mg/kg MB1707 in patients with advanced cancers.
NCT06163846
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death in Europe. Pathological staging is the gold standard, but it can be influenced by neo-adjuvant treatment and number of sampled lymph nodes; it is not feasible in advanced stages and in patients with high-risk comorbidities. Therefore, patients with tumors of the same stage can experience variations in the incidence of recurrence and survival since suboptimal staging leads to inappropriate treatment that result in poorer outcomes. It is still undetermined what are the tumor characteristics that can accurately assess tumor burden and predict patient outcome.Our central hypothesis is that image-derived and genetic characteristics are consistent with disease stage and patient outcome. Combining through artificial intelligence techniques data coming from imaging and circulating cell-free tumor DNA (ctDNA) can provide accurate staging and predict outcome. This hypothesis has been formulated based on preliminary data and on the evidence that image-derived biomarkers by means of image mining (radiomics and deep learning algorithms) are able to provide "phenotype" and prognostic information. On the other hand, the analysis of ctDNA isolated from the plasma of patients has been proposed as an alternative method to assess the disease in the different phases, in particular, at diagnosis and after surgery, for detection of residual disease.
NCT02482168
This study is a phase 1 open-label dose escalation study of the immuno-activating monoclonal antibody APX005M in adults with solid tumors. Study is intended to establish the maximum tolerated dose and the overall safety and tolerability of APX005M in 3 different administration schedules.
NCT05510674
The Evolution study is a phase 1a and 1b study evaluating the safety and pharmacokinetics of D5- ethyl-βGlucuronide as well as the target dose for the probe to maximize the difference between controls and subjects with lung cancer. The phase 1a study will be designed as a single ascending dose study in healthy volunteers and will be conducted in a phase 1 trial unit with a primary objective to assess safety of the probe. A subsequent phase 1b study will be conducted at clinical sites and will aim to find the optimal dosing and breath sampling protocol to maximize the accuracy of the breath test. Evolution Phase 1 is a multicentre study; Phase 1a will be conducted at a Phase 1 facility in Belgium and Phase 1b will be conducted in the UK.
NCT04151563
This study is for participants with Non-small Cell Lung Cancer that has spread or has reoccurred after failure of Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy
NCT03845270
HER2 (erbB-2/neu) is a member of the erbB receptor tyrosine kinase family. ERBB2 gene which encodes human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) is a major proliferative driver activating downstream signaling through PI3K-AKT and MEK-ERK. HER2 overexpression or gene amplification is associated with sensitivity to trastuzumab and lapatinib in breast cancer. Among actual lung cancer biomarker, HER2 remains apart. HER2 involvement is known for a long time but clinical research has been stopped for many years since the first clinical trials in unselected patients were negative. Recently trastuzumab + pertuzumab + docetaxel has been tested for first-line treatment of HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer (CLEOPATRA trial). Analysis of the primary end point showed that patients who received pertuzumab, trastuzumab, and docetaxel (pertuzumab group) had a significantly longer median progression-free survival, as assessed by independent reviewers an did those who received placebo, trastuzumab, and docetaxel (control group) (hazard ratio favoring the pertuzumab group, 0.62). There is thus a strong rational for treating HER2 mutated lung cancer patient with these drugs.
NCT05363605
This first-in-human study evaluates safety, tolerability and distribution of \[225Ac\] FPI-1966, \[111In\]-FPI-1967, and vofatamab in patients with FGFR3-expressing solid tumors.