An Observational Clinical Study of Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer With Stable Disease After PD-1 Inhibitor Treatment
An Observational Clinical Study of Increasing Stereotactic Radiotherapy in Patients With Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer After Treatment With PD-1 Inhibitors And Evaluation of Stable Disease
About This Trial
After the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer with immune checkpoint inhibitor PD-1/PD-L1 monoclonal antibody, if the treatment response of complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) can be achieved in the early stage, the patients are expected to obtain a better long-term survival rate. Radiotherapy can synergistically improve the effect of immunotherapy. Therefore, we propose a hypothesis: in patients with advanced lung cancer, if only stable disease (SD) is achieved after PD-1 antibody immunotherapy in the early stage, by increasing the stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT) for primary or metastatic lesions, in order to improve the mechanism of tumor antigen release, promote the activation and activation of effector T cells, and increase the sensitivity of immunotherapy, so as to achieve the goal of early improvement of objective remission rate (ORR). It is expected to improve the long-term survival rate of patients.
Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)
Original Eligibility Criteria
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Treatments Being Tested
PD-1 inhibitor
After receiving PD-1 inhibitor treatment in the first three cycles, patients with locally advanced or advanced NSCLC whose curative effect is evaluated as stable disease receive SBRT combined with PD-1 inhibitor treatment