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Browse 3,692 clinical trials for lung cancer. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT05098132
This is a phase 1/2, multicenter, open-label study. The phase 1 portion is a dose escalation and expansion study of STK-012 as monotherapy and in combination therapy in patients with selected advanced solid tumors. The phase 2 portion is a randomized study of STK-012 in combination with standard of care (SoC) pembrolizumab, pemetrexed, and carboplatin versus SoC, in patients with first line, PD-L1 negative, non-squamous, non-small cell lung cancer.
NCT07195695
This study is open to adults 18 years and older who have early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Their cancer must have a specific change in a gene called HER2. Genes provide the instructions for making proteins, and this change leads to a faulty HER2 protein. People can join if their lung cancer was removed by surgery, and they have already received certain other anti-cancer treatments. The purpose of this study is to find out if a study medicine called zongertinib helps people with this type of cancer live longer without their cancer coming back after surgery, when compared to standard treatment. Zongertinib is being developed to target the faulty HER2 protein, which can cause cancer cells to grow. In this study, participants are assigned by chance to one of two treatment groups, with an equal chance of being in either group. One group takes the study medicine, zongertinib, by mouth once a day for up to 3 years. The other group receives a standard treatment, chosen by their doctor. This standard treatment may be an immunotherapy medicine given by infusion into a vein every 3 or 4 weeks for up to 1 year, or regular check-ups without active study medicine (observation). Participants can be in this study for up to about 11 years. During this time, they visit the study site regularly for check-ups and study-related tests. The frequency of these visits varies depending on their treatment and how long they have been in the study. In addition to visits at the study site, participants in some treatment groups will also have phone calls with the study team every 3 weeks to check on their health between their scheduled visits. Doctors check for any signs of cancer coming back using imaging scans (like CT or MRI scans); these scans are generally done every 3 months for the first 2 years, then every 6 months for the next 3 years, and then yearly. Participants also fill in questionnaires about their overall wellbeing, health and symptoms. Throughout the study, doctors also check participants' health and note any unwanted effects.
NCT05142696
This study aims to establish a safe and well tolerated dose of \[177Lu\]Lu-DOTA-TATE in combination with carboplatin, etoposide and atezolizumab in this setting and to assess preliminary efficacy of this combination treatment versus the combination of carboplatin, etoposide, and atezolizumab.The study will be essential to assess a new potential therapeutic option in participants with this aggressive cancer type.
NCT05456841
Research indicates that perceived stigma within medical encounters is prevalent and problematic for lung cancer patients' well-being and quality of cancer care. Promoting empathic communication appears to be a potentially effective intervention target to help reduce patients' perceptions of stigma within clinical encounters; however, no formal trainings exist that focus on teaching empathic communication to oncology care providers (OCPs). Building upon favorable findings from a prior R21 (R21CA202793) and the importance of developing interventions to address lung cancer stigma, our goal is to conduct a national trial of empathic communication skills (ECS) training to facilitate improvements in the medical and psychosocial care of patients through de-stigmatizing interactions with OCPs for patients diagnosed with lung cancer.
NCT04977453
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and therapeutic activity of GI-101/GI-101A as a single agent or in combination with pembrolizumab or lenvatinib over a range of advanced and/or metastatic solid tumors.
NCT07122882
Currently, tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) remains the standard of care for oncogene-driven non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, almost all oncogene-driven NSCLCs would develop acquired resistance against TKI in clinical practice. Therefore, understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the acquired resistance is a critical issue in lung cancer. Based on the literature, acquired resistance mechanism against EGFR TKI includes EGFR secondary mutation (T790M, C797X, L792X, G796X, L718Q, and exon 20 insertions), MET amplification, HER2 amplification, acquired gene fusions, and other complex alterations. From the perspective of mutagenesis, the acquired resistance against TKI may be associated with APOBEC mutational processes, kataegis, chromothripsis, extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA), and the interaction among them. However, still 30% to 50% of oncogene-driven NSCLCs had no identified mechanism attributed to the acquired resistance. Previous studies mostly used targeted-gene sequencing, which may overlook some structural variation and the transcriptomic dynamics. This study aims to investigate the genomic alterations, mutational processes, and the transcriptomic landscape underlying the acquired resistance using integrated genomics.
NCT07396467
This retrospective observational study evaluates immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-related outcomes in lung cancer patients with concomitant pulmonary fibrosis/interstitial lung disease (ILD) and determines how fibrosis/ILD modifies immunotherapy effectiveness and safety. The study characterizes the clinical, radiographic, pathological, and molecular features of lung cancer with ILD and examines their associations with ICI response and survival. A comparator cohort of lung cancer patients without radiographic ILD from the same institution and time period is included to compare ICI effectiveness (e.g., response and survival outcomes) and pulmonary toxicity signals, including pneumonitis and acute ILD exacerbation. In a translational sub-study, archived lung tumor specimens undergo single-cell and spatial transcriptomic profiling to identify fibrosis-associated tumor-microenvironment programs that may underlie differential immunotherapy outcomes.
NCT07476287
This study is being done to learn more about a new medicine called PF-08634404. The study team wants to understand how well PF-08634404 works when given alone or with chemotherapy . Chemotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that uses medicines to destroy cancer cells or stop them from growing. The study is for adults with Transformed Small Cell Lung Cancer (T-SCLC ). T SCLC is a rare lung cancer that happens when one type of lung cancer changes into a more aggressive type after treatment stops working. To join the study, participants must meet the following conditions: * Are aged 18 years or older * Diagnosed with T-SCLC and have not received treatment for this type of lung cancer (a single cycle of chemotherapy may be permitted) * Prior diagnosis of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-mutated non-small cell lung cancer treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) * Have healthy organs based on medical tests and are in good physical condition After joining the study, adults will be given chemotherapy in addition to the study medicine. After this combination treatment is finished, the study medicine will be continued alone. Adults will receive the treatment through IV infusions (medicine given directly into a vein). All treatments will be done at clinical study sites, where a trained medical team will monitor adults during and after each visit.
NCT07476495
In patients with resectable NSCLC treated with surgery alone or with surgery as part of a multimodal treatment; CTC, ctDNA, STAS, and lymph node micrometastasis levels will be evaluated to see if they are associated with recurrence patterns and long-term outcomes.
NCT01647425
This is an multicenter study for preventive and therapeutic strategies for patients with head and neck cancer
NCT07472478
This study is a multicenter, prospective, open-label clinical trial. It enrolls previously untreated patients with resectable stage IB-IIIB KRAS G12C mutation-positive NSCLC to evaluate the efficacy and safety of glesorasib sequentially combined with ivonescimab and chemotherapy as perioperative treatment for this patient population.
NCT07473128
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the efficacy and safety of trilaciclib versus placebo in subjects with limited stage small cell lung cancer. The main question it aims to answer is: Does trilaciclib have a myeloprotective effect in subject with limited stage small cell lung cancer? Participants will be randomised to receive either trilaciclib or placebo.
NCT07279948
A single-arm observational study to characterize the demographic, clinical features and outcomes of a Brazilian cohort of patients with lung cancer.
NCT06357533
The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of Dato-DXd in combination with rilvegostomig or rilvegostomig monotherapy compared with pembrolizumab monotherapy as a first line therapy in participants with locally advanced or metastatic non-squamous NSCLC with high PD-L1 expression (TC ≥ 50%) and without actionable genomic alterations.
NCT06070870
Evaluate the impact of the patient navigation program on the proportion of patients who complete lung cancer screening (LCS), defined as undergoing a low dose computed tomography (LDCT)
NCT06284317
ADOPT-lung is an international, multicentre, open-label randomised phase III trial. Protocol treatment consists of 3-4 cycles of neoadjuvant durvalumab in combination with platinum-based doublet chemotherapy, followed by surgery. Patients with R0 and R1 only resection will be randomised to receive either adjuvant durvalumab for 12 cycles (experimental arm) or observation (control arm). The primary objective of the study is to determine whether additional adjuvant immunotherapy with durvalumab after neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy has an effect on disease-free survival (DFS) in patients who do not achieve complete pathological response (pCR) as per local assessment according to the IASLC recommendations.
NCT07472647
This is an open-label, multi-cohort, multicenter Phase Ib/II clinical study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of SYS6090 injection in combination with chemotherapy or chemotherapy and bevacizumab or SYS6010 (an EGFR ADC) in participants with advanced lung cancer.
NCT05009329
To assess safety, tolerability, PK, efficacy and determine recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of JAB-21822 (glecirasib) administered in adult participants with KRAS p.G12C-mutant advanced solid tumors.
NCT02759614
This is a randomized, open-label, controlled, multicenter, Phase III study. Patients will be randomly assigned to treatment group (1:1) through a dynamic randomization process with use of the following stratification factors: sex (female/male), disease stage (stage IIIb vs. stage IV vs. recurrence), and EGFR gene mutation (exon 19 deletion vs. exon 21 L858R).
NCT06731413
Evaluate frequency of adverse events that lead to chemotherapy discontinuation in vulnerable older adults with recurrent/metastatic PD-L1 TPS\<50% NSCLC patients who receive reduced dose chemotherapy in combination with immunotherapy.