Lattice radiation therapy (LRT) is a spatially fractionated thoracic radiotherapy technique that creates alternating high- and low-dose regions within primary lung tumors and metastatic lymph nodes to strengthen local tumor suppression and reduce radiation injury to normal thoracic organs. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of combining LRT with consolidation chemoimmunotherapy in unresectable stage III LA-NSCLC patients who show suboptimal tumor response to prior neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy, through a single-arm Phase II clinical trial. Patients will receive thoracic LRT delivered by a medical linear accelerator. High-dose spherical sub-targets will be contoured within the gross tumor volume of primary lung lesions and regional nodal metastases under standardized dose constraints to spare the lung, heart and esophagus. All enrolled subjects will receive sequential consolidation chemoimmunotherapy administered within one week after finishing LRT. Tumor response, treatment-related adverse events, local tumor control and long-term survival outcomes will be prospectively tracked throughout treatment and long-term follow-up.
Age range
18 Years
Sex
ALL
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Bring these to your next appointment. They're a starting point for a shared conversation — not a sign you qualify or a recommendation to enrol.
Generated to help you prepare — always confirm anything about your own eligibility and care with the study team and your doctor.
The trial coordinator is the person who runs the study day to day. These cover the practical side — logistics, costs, and what taking part would actually mean for your life. The study team confirms whether you meet the criteria; these are questions to ask, not a sign you qualify.
A starting point for the conversation — always confirm anything about your own eligibility, costs, and care with the study team and your doctor.
Objective response rate
Timeframe: From enrollment up to 12 months after the last subject completes combination therapy
Pathological complete response
Timeframe: From enrollment to 12 months after the last subject completes all study combination therapy