Durvalumab as Consolidation for Patients LS-SCLC

Sponsor
Qian Chu
Study ID
NCT07055581
Phase
PHASE2
Status
Recruiting

Conditions

  • Small Cell Lung Cancer Limited Stage

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
ALL
Age
18 Years - N/A
Healthy Volunteers
Not accepted

Interventions

  • Induction Durvalumab +etoposide/platinum +Radiochemotherapy+ durvalumab maintenance — DRUG
    Drug: Durvalumab Induction Phase: Durvalumab (1500mg D1 IV Q3W) combined with EP \[cisplatin or alternatively Carboplatin (AUC 5-6 D1) and Etoposide (100 mg/m² (BSA) D1-3) once every 3 weeks\] for minimum two cycles prior to thoracic radiotherapy Consolidation Phase: Durvalumab (1500 mg once every 4 weeks) until PD or unacceptable toxicities or for a maximum of 24 months, whichever occurs first. Drug: Chemotherapy Concomitant chemoradiotherapy consists of further four cycles Etoposide (100 mg/m² D1-3), cisplatin (75 mg/m² D1) /carboplatin (AUC 5-6 D1) q3w Radiation: Thoracic Radiotherapy Radiotherapy to the primary tumor is recommended to start with the 3rd cycle of EP, which can be delayed appropriately per investigator's decision. 60±6 Gy, 1.8-2 Gy/d or 45±1.5 Gy (1.5 Gy per fraction twice daily, with 4 hours or more between fractions) or other biologically equivalent regimens will be delivered.

Study Details

Small-Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) accounts for 10% to 15% of new lung cancers and is a highly aggressive neuroendocrine tumor. In the past 30 years, the treatment of SCLC has made very limited progress, and basically made breakthroughs in radiotherapy and chemotherapy. With the advent of the immune era, immunotherapy has achieved initial results in the treatment of SCLC. Approximately one-third of patients with small cell lung cancer are in limited-stage (LS-SCLC) disease at first diagnosis. Except for a very small number of patients with T1-2N0 who can be treated with surgery or stereotactic radiation therapy (SBRT), the standard treatment for the rest of the patients with LS-SCLC is concurrent chemoradiotherapy. The ORR of platinum-combined etoposide regimen combined with thoracic radiotherapy in LS-SCLC can reach 70% to 90%, and the median OS is 16-24 months, which significantly improves the survival of patients. Although many measures have been taken in the treatment of LS-SCLC, only 20% of LS-SCLC can be cured, and most patients have relapse and metastasis after treatment. This study is a single arm phase II preliminary pilot study, aim to assess the efficacy and safety of durvalumab combined with EP prior to CRT and followed by durvalumab consolidation therapy for LS-SCLC.

Key Dates

Start date
Feb 24, 2026
Status verified
Jul 2025
Primary completion
Jul 31, 2029
Completion
Jul 31, 2029

Study Design

Enrollment
100 participants (estimated)
Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT

Arms

  • Experimental: single arm, multi-center, phase II study

Primary Outcome Measure

Progression-free survival (PFS) [ Time Frame: Every 6weeks from the beginning of Cycle 1(each cycle is 42±7days) in induction phase, every 8weeks(each cycle is 56±7days) in first year and every 12weeks in second year in consolidation phase, thereafter every 24weeks until PD or death,up to 3years ]

Central Contacts