Lung Cancer

Occupational and Environmental Exposure to Asbestos Reduces Longevity in Patients

Mesothelioma is a hard cancer to treat that is mainly caused by asbestos. People with this cancer typically do not live very long after diagnosis, but some people live longer than expected. A study recently published in the journal Toxics looked at people with mesothelioma and asbestos-caused lung cancer. All[…]

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Radiation and Immunotherapy Combination Improves Survival in Lung Cancer Patients

A new study looking at low dose radiation and immunotherapy is showing promising results for non-small cell lung cancer. Patients treated with the combination had higher progression free survival compared to patients who received immunotherapy alone. Research was completed at Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian as well as at Columbia University[…]

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A Vaccine to Prevent and Treat Mesothelioma Could be Possible in the Future

A vaccine for lung cancer could possibly lead to a vaccine for mesothelioma. The lung cancer immunotherapy drug CIMAvax-EFG is making great progress, and because of this progress, researchers are utilizing the treatment in new ways. The researchers are trying to see how the vaccine can be used to prevent[…]

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A Phase 1 Study of PRT3645 in Participants With Select Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumors

Primary Outcome Measures Dose limiting toxicity (DLT) of PRT3645 [ Time Frame: Baseline through Day 28 ] Dose limiting toxicity will be evaluated over the 28-day observation period Safety and tolerability of PRT3645: AEs, CTCAE Assessments [ Time Frame: Baseline through approximately 2 years ] Safety and tolerability will be evaluated by incidence of DLTs, laboratory measurements, severity[…]

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An Inhalable Gene Therapy is Being Tested for Mesothelioma

An inhalable gene therapy could potentially be approved for use in mesothelioma patients. Researchers in Japan have created two different tumor suppressing drugs that work by targeting genetic mutations. The drugs were created for non-small cell cancer and pleural mesothelioma. They are both doing well in the laboratory. The drugs[…]

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Feasibility Trial of a Personalised Nutrition and Activity Programme for People With Lung Cancer Over 65 Years (CanBenefitII)

Primary Outcome Measures Recruitment Rate [ Time Frame: 24 weeks ] The Recruitment Rate will be assessed by the number of eligible patients approached vs the number of eligible patients consent for the study, providing a number of non-participations. This will be gathered as an aspect of feasibility. Retention Rate [ Time Frame: 24 weeks ] Retention rate[…]

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Vudalimab for the Treatment of Mesothelioma

The MD Anderson Cancer Center is conducting a study on an immunotherapy drug that is specifically for rare, advanced tumors. Pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma are both included in the study. The clinical trial is looking for effectiveness and safety of vudalimab. The treatment, also known as XmAb20717, was created by[…]

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Proton Beam Radiation Therapy Use Increases for Mesothelioma and Lung Cancer

Proton beam radiation therapy is growing in popularity for treating mesothelioma and lung cancer. A study in JAMA Oncology looked at the use of this radiation for treating different types of cancer. There were almost 6 million patients in the study and data shows that proton radiation use tripled from[…]

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Glypican-1 Expression in Epithelioid Mesothelioma, Adenocarcinoma and SCC of the Lung

Primary outcome Measures evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of Glypican-1 in pleural epitheloid mesothelioma, lung adenocarcinoma and lung SCC [ Time Frame: 1 month ] Immunohistochemical study to correlate its expression with some known clinico-pathological parameters, to evaluate its diagnostic and prognostic role. [ Time Frame: 1 month ] Statistical analysis Inclusion Criteria Patients with pleural epithelioid mesothelioma and[…]

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An Inhaled Vaccine Could Potentially Help Mesothelioma Patients in the Future

An inhaled vaccine could be used for mesothelioma treatment soon. Research done at MIT is showing that the inhaled vaccine can trigger an immune response for certain infections and possibly lung-based cancers. This is great news for people with mesothelioma. Lung infections typically start on mucosal membranes, so researchers created[…]

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