New trial for Lung NETs (lung neuroendocrine tumors) - 1293144

trialbee
Posts:2

Would you be interested to participate in a clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of an investigative drug for Lung Neuroendocrine Tumors (Lung NETs)?

This clinical study is being conducted to evaluate an investigative treatment for Lung Neuroendocrine Tumors (Lung NETs). You may have heard of this condition being called Lung Carcinoid Tumors, Bronchial NETs, or Pulmonary NETs.

A total of 216 patients will be a part of this global study, which has been approved by the FDA and relevant ethics committees. We are looking for both males and females, aged 18 years or older, who are diagnosed with a neuroendocrine tumor of the lung (Lung NET).

Read more here.

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JimC
Posts: 2753

GRACE makes no specific endorsement of any trial posted on this site, nor has GRACE evaluated its likelihood of success.

It appears that this trial is listed on clinicaltrials.gov here: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/study/NCT02683941?term=neuroendocri…

Patients interested in this trial should be aware that two-thirds of the trial participants will receive the investigational drug, while one-third will receive a placebo and "best supportive care", but no anti-cancer therapy until their disease progresses, at which time they will become eligible to receive the trial drug.

JimC
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JimC
Posts: 2753

Dr. Weiss has previously written about the trial drug Lanreotide (Somatuline Depot Injection) and had this to say (note that his post was 5 years ago, but we have nothing more recent than that):

"Apparently, somatuline is a somatostatin analogue. I realize that this may not mean much to many, but Dr. West and Dr. Pinder will recognize this as a class of drugs used to treat carcinoid tumors and severe diarrhea. I would not utilize this drug off trial to treat NSCLC other than perhaps pulmonary carcinoid. I would consider it in a clinic trial, especially if it were given with an agent known to be active or to patients with slow growing cancers. I don’t have experience with the agent, but if it’s like sandostatin (the somatostatin analogue that I do have experience with) I would expect side effects to be minimal." - http://cancergrace.org/topic/somatuline-lp-60#post-1246261

JimC
Forum moderator