For nearly half of people diagnosed with lung cancer, immunotherapy can slow the disease but not stop it. Funded through a $4 million joint investment from the Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) and the Weston Family Foundation, a new clinical trial aims to change that.
Venetoclax and HMA-based Therapies for the Treatment of Older and Unfit Adults with Newly Diagnosed FLT3-mutated AML: A myeloMATCH Treatment Trial
VIGOR: Vorasidenib as Maintenance Treatment after First-line Chemoradiotherapy in IDH-mutant Grade 2 or 3 Astrocytoma
Autologous Stem Cell Transplant in Peripheral T Cell Lymphoma that Achieved a First Complete Remission (CR1) Following Induction Therapy (PTCL-STAT)
Lanreotide for the Prevention of Postoperative Pancreatic Fistula
A new survey study SC32S, collecting sociodemographic data from clinical trial participants, has now opened across Canada. This study will help researchers understand the feasibility of using a survey to gather information about trial participants’ backgrounds and everyday lives.
Phase II Trial of ASTX727 and Venetoclax Compared with ASTX727, Venetoclax, and Enasidenib for New Diagnosed Older Adults with IDH2 Mutant AML - A myeloMATCH Substudy
Eradicating MRD in Patients with AML prior to Stem Cell Transplant (ERASE)
Investigating Precision Medicine in the Adjuvant setting: a phase III Clinical Trial in Biliary tract cancer (SAFIR IMPACT BTC)
LUNA-2: LND101 in Unresectable Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Randomized Phase II Trial
RAINBO-ORANGE: Treatment of Endometrial Cancer Based On Molecular Features
Delayed Reduced Volume and Dose Elective Radiotherapy (REVERT) in Patients with HNSCC
The next CCTG Clinical Research Associate (CRA) Lunch and Learn training session will be on Wednesday Jun 24th, 2025, at 12 pm ET, covering the top
The usual treatment approach for lung cancer that has spread is to continue taking immunotherapy, or potentially switch treatment if your doctor thinks it’s a good idea. The purpose of this study is to compare the usual treatment approach to a technique in radiotherapy called stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) while continuing the current treatment of immunotherapy with or without chemotherapy.
The purpose of the study is to identify which non-small cell lung cancer patients would benefit from the addition of chemotherapy to their standard immunotherapy treatment. Researchers want to understand if patients who have the chemotherapy added are getting maximum potential benefit with less risk of side effects.
A blood test will be given to identify who would benefit from added chemotherapy by using circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA), which is DNA shed by the patient’s cancer.
The purpose of this study is to compare the use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) surveillance combined with prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) to MRI surveillance alone in treating your lung cancer that can sometimes spread to the brain.
MRI scans are used to monitor the possible spread of the cancer with an MRI machine over time. PCI is radiation therapy that is delivered to the brain in hopes of preventing spread of cancer into the brain.