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Active clinical trials for "Lung Neoplasms"

Results 751-760 of 6521

Supportive Care Intervention (ROAR-LCT) for Patients With Stage IIIA, IIIB, and IV Lung Cancer,...

Advanced Lung Non-Small Cell CarcinomaAdvanced Lung Small Cell Carcinoma8 more

This phase II trial tests whether a supportive care intervention (Resiliency among Older Adults Receiving Lung Cancer Treatment [ROAR-LCT]) is effective in improving physical and emotional wellbeing in patients with stage IIIA, IIIB, and IV lung cancer undergoing cancer treatment. Lung cancers are one of the most common cancers. Lung cancers occur in the chest and often cause symptoms for patients. Poor physical performance and negative mood are two risk factors for a decline in functional status. Targeted interventions may address these two risk factors and improve functional status and resilience. Physical therapy and relaxation interventions (i.e. progressive muscle relaxation) are two such interventions that may improve symptoms and quality of life for patients with cancer.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Personalised Diet, Exercise and Emotional Support for Lung Cancer Patients Having Chemotherapy,...

Lung Cancer

Background The term 'prehabilitation' refers to a period of time before treatment and often includes diet, exercise and/or wellbeing plans to help patients through their cancer treatment. Prehabilitation has shown to benefit patients having surgery, but there is little research into its use in the oncological setting. The United Kingdom sees more deaths from lung cancer than any other cancer. 70-80% of lung cancer patients receive oncological treatment. Treatment side effects can have a significant impact on quality of life. Personalised prehabilitation can take into account the challenges patients face, helping patients through treatment. Aim To see if a personalised plan of diet, exercise and emotional support can be used in practice for patients having chemotherapy, radiotherapy and/or immunotherapy treatment for lung cancer. Methods The study will involve lung cancer patients from Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust who are: Over the age of 18 years old Have not had previous lung cancer surgery and Are about to start chemotherapy, radiotherapy or immunotherapy treatment The prehabilitation interventions will be based upon patient need and readiness, assessed using: A series of questionnaires An assessment of walking A measure of grip strength These will be done prior to, at week three and at week six of a patient's oncological treatment regime. Personalised goals will be agreed at each stage. Throughout treatment, patients will be asked to keep a daily diary to record their symptoms, appetite, mobility and mood. The diary will also be used to monitor goal adherence. Public involvement Patients will be part of a study advisory group, helping with research design and dissemination e.g. with the presentation of findings to the lung cancer support group. Dissemination All patients will receive a written summary of findings. Results will be shared in a scientific journal and presented at relevant conferences. Patients will not be identifiable.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Couple-Based Meditation for Metastatic Lung Cancer Patients and Their Partners

Lung Cancer

Objectives: Our specific aims are to: Aim 1: Examine the feasibility of a couple-based meditation program in 50 patients with metastatic lung cancer and their partners. Aim 2: Establish the initial efficacy of a couple-based meditation program in patients and their partners regarding physical, psychological, and spiritual quality of life outcomes.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Watchful Observation of Patients With LD-SCLC Instead of the PCI

Small-cell Lung Cancer

Prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) is a current standard of care after confirmed response to radical chemoradiotherapy for limited disease small cell lung cancer (LD-SCLC). This standard is mostly based on results of old randomized studies when brain imaging with magnetic resonance (MRI) was not available. Survival benefit of PCI in extended SCLC was recently challenged by results of randomized phase III study from Japan. We propose to carefully follow LD-SCLC patients with MRI instead of PCI in order to apply modern brain irradiation [stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) in eligible patients or whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT)] to patients who develop metastases and to eliminate long terms neurocognitive deficits caused by PCI in patients who would never develop brain metastases. Methods and analysis This is a prospective multi-centre one-arm trial. A total of 80 patients diagnosed with LD-SCLC after confirmed response to standard of care radical chemoradiotherapy will be enrolled. Patients will be followed-up by brain MRI every 3 months up to 3 years. Neurocognitive function tests will be performed at baseline and after 12 and 24 months. Patients who develop brain metastases during observation will be irradiated. In case of limited number and volume of metastases SRT will be offered to patients; others will be treated with WBRT. The primary endpoint of the trial is overall survival. We have assumed that our approach will not compromise overall survival of treated patients. 2-year survival will be at least 50% in our trial compared to 36% for a group of 138 patients LD-SCLC from our institution treated in 2003-2006 with radical chemoradiotherapy and PCI. The secondary endpoints were designed to asses the risk of developing brain metastases without PCI; to assess the efficacy of radiotherapy of early detected brain metastases, including the feasibility and efficacy of SRT; to assess neurocognitive functions and QoL in the studied cohort. QLQ-C30 questionnaire and the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT), Color connection test (CTT), Benton visual memory test (BNRT) and Verbal fluency test (VFT) will be carried out by the certified psychologist. Ethics and dissemination The trial received ethical approval from the local medical university Bioethical Review Board (Komisja Bioetyczna Collegium Medicum Uniwersytet Warmińsko-Mazurski w Olsztynie). The results of the trial will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Self-Management Survivorship Care in Stage I-III Non-small Cell Lung Cancer or Colorectal Cancer...

Lung Non-Small Cell CarcinomaStage I Colorectal Cancer AJCC v820 more

This phase III trial studies how well a telehealth self-management program works in improving survivorship care and outcomes in stage I-III non-small cell lung cancer or colorectal cancer survivors. Survivor self-management program focuses on coaching patients on follow-up care after cancer treatments. Participating in the program may improve knowledge and confidence about follow-up care, communication with cancer care and primary care doctors, and quality of life after cancer treatment in non-small cell lung cancer or colorectal cancer survivors.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Biodistribution and Kinetics of 18F-AraG in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

This study is to assess the biodistribution and kinetics of a novel T-cell imaging agent in non-small cell lung cancer patients undergoing immunotherapy with and without adjuvant radiation therapy. This study is assessing the change in kinetics that occurs in this patient population to better understand the distribution of this compound in patient disease circumstances.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Lung Cancer, Exercise and Force Development

Lung Cancer

This study evaluates the effectiveness of a supervised one-leg resistance training program in patients with inoperable lung cancer with the primary outcome being rate of force development. Study design: Single center, two-armed, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial. The primary outcome being rate of force development after 12 weeks of progressive resistance training.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of an Acute Physical Exercise Before Treatment Infusion for Metastatic Lung Cancer Patients...

CarcinomaNon-Small-Cell Lung

Because of metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (mNSCLC) and its treatments, patients suffer from numerous symptoms such as dyspnea, muscle atrophy, pain, fatigue, loss of appetite, altered physical condition and lung function, which may further impair the patient's overall condition. Nevertheless, it has been suggested that physical exercise could improve response to treatment at the clinical level due to its known effects on the immune system. Moreover, preclinical studies have shown that exercise performed during chemotherapy administration could result in physiological benefits such as improved intra-tumoral infusion and drug delivery. The ERICA study aims to assess the feasibility of an acute physical exercise immediately before immunotherapy and chemotherapy administration in patients with mNSCLC.

Recruiting23 enrollment criteria

NutriCare Plus a Medically Tailored Meal Intervention Among Patients With Lung Cancer

Lung CancerSmall Cell6 more

The NutriCare study aims to develop, implement, and evaluate the efficacy of an innovative intervention strategy (medically tailored meals plus nutrition counseling) to integrate nutrition into the standard of care for oncology to improve outcomes of vulnerable patients with lung cancer. The NutriCare study evaluates the efficacy of the intervention on optimizing nutritional status, reducing treatment-related toxicities, and improving the quality of life of patients with lung cancer who are economically disadvantaged, uninsured, racial and ethnic minorities, elderly, and/or rural residents from four major medical centers in diverse regions of the United States (U.S.). There will be two cohorts for NutriCare with cohort 1 recruiting 150 patients completing an 8-month intervention and cohort 2 recruiting 120 patients completing a 6-month intervention.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Opioid Free Anaesthesia-Analgesia Strategy on Surgical Stress and Immunomodulation in Elective VATS-Lobectomy...

Systemic Inflammatory Response SyndromePostoperative Pain7 more

Lobectomy is a major, high-risk surgical procedure that in addition to one-lung ventilation (OLV) exerts a potent surgical stress response. An overwhelming immune cell recruitment may lead to excessive tissue damage, peripheral organ injury and immunoparesis. The effect of anesthesia on the immune system is modest, compared to the effects induced by major surgery. However, to an immunocompromised patient, due to cancer and/or other comorbidities, the immunosuppressive effects of anesthesia may increase the incidence of post-operative infections, morbidity, and mortality. Exogenous opioids have been correlated with immunosuppression, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, and respiratory depression, with deleterious outcomes. An Opioid-Free Anaesthesia-Analgesia (OFA-A) strategy is based on the administration of a variety of anaesthetic/analgesic and other pharmacological agents with different mechanisms of action, including immunomodulating and anti-inflammatory effects. Our basic hypothesis is that the implementation of a perioperative multimodal OFA-A strategy, will lead to an attenuated surgical stress response and attenuated immunosuppression, compared to a conventional Opioid-Based Anaesthesia-Analgesia (OBA-A) strategy. The aforementioned effects, are presumed to be associated with equal or improved analgesia and decreased incidence of postoperative infections compared to a perioperative OBA-A technique.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria
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