Lung Cancer Clinical Trials in Tampa, FL

Lung Cancer Clinical Trials in Tampa, FL

View the best 10 lung cancer medical studies in Tampa, Florida. Access promising new therapies by applying to a Tampa-based Lung Cancer clinical trial.

Trials in Tampa, Florida

Here are the top 10 medical studies for lung cancer in Tampa, Florida

Image of Fairbanks Memorial Hospital in Fairbanks, United States.

Selpercatinib

Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial will study how well selpercatinib works in treating patients with RET fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer. Selpercatinib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.
Image of Children's Hospital of Alabama in Birmingham, United States.

Thoracotomy +1 More

Procedure

Recruiting2 awardsPhase 3
This trial compares the effect of open thoracic surgery to thoracoscopic surgery in treating patients with osteosarcoma that has spread to the lung.
Image of Fairbanks Memorial Hospital in Fairbanks, United States.

Carboplatin +2 More

Alkylating agents

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is testing pembrolizumab with or without chemotherapy to treat patients with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer that has come back and spread to other places in the body.
Image of Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, United States.

DS-1062a

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is determining if DS-1062a, a new drug, is effective, safe, and how it is metabolized in patients with NSCLC.
Image of Cancer Care of North Florida in Lake City, United States.

NovoTTF-200T

Device

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial is testing a device that sends electric fields to the chest to treat lung cancer along with the drug pembrolizumab. The aim is to see if the combination can help people with lung cancer who haven't been treated before.
Image of Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers in Denver, United States.

Carboplatin +3 More

Alkylating agents

Recruiting1 awardPhase 3
This trial will compare tiragolumab plus atezolizumab with placebo plus atezolizumab in people with small cell lung cancer who have not had chemotherapy before.
Image of University of Alabama at Birmingham in Birmingham, United States.

Zimberelimab +2 More

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial will study the safety and effectiveness of two different immunotherapy treatments for people with non-small cell lung cancer.
Image of Desert Hematology Oncology Medical Group, Inc. in Rancho Mirage, United States.

Cemiplimab +1 More

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting0 awardsPhase 2 & 3
This trial is testing a new drug combination for patients with advanced lung cancer. It aims to see if using two drugs together is more effective than one alone. The study also looks at side effects, how the drugs are processed in the body, and their impact on quality of life.
Image of Hematology Oncology Associates of CNY, PC in East Syracuse, United States.

Adagrasib

Small Molecule Drug

Recruiting1 awardPhase 2
This trial tests a drug combo to treat advanced lung cancer with a genetic mutation.
Image of Research Site - Orange City in Orange City, United States.

HLX10

Monoclonal Antibodies

Recruiting3 awardsPhase 3
This trial is testing two different treatment combinations for patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer who have not received any prior treatment. One group will receive a new drug called Serplulimab along with standard chemotherapy, while the other group will receive an existing drug called Atezolizumab with the same chemotherapy. Both immunotherapy drugs aim to help the immune system fight cancer, and the chemotherapy drugs work by killing cancer cells. Atezolizumab has been shown to improve survival in small-cell lung cancer when combined with chemotherapy, changing the standard first-line therapy.

Phase 3 Trials

Trials With No Placebo

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need insurance to participate in a trial?
Almost all clinical trials will cover the cost of the 'trial drug' — so no insurance is required for this. For trials where this trial drug is given alongside an already-approved medication, there may be a cost (which your insurance would normally cover).
Is there any support for travel costs?
Many of the teams running clinical trials will cover the cost of transportation to-and-from their care center.
Will I know what medication I am taking?
This depends on the specific study. If you're worried about receiving a placebo, you can actively filter out these trials using our search.
How long do clinical trials last?
Some trials will only require a single visit, while others will continue until your disease returns. It's fairly common for a trial to last somewhere between 1 and 6 months.
Do you verify all the trials on your website?
All of the trials listed on Power have been formally registered with the US Food and Drug Administration. Beyond this, some trials on Power have been formally 'verified' if the team behind the trial has completed an additional level of verification with our team.
How quickly will I hear back from a clinical trial?
Sadly, this response time can take anywhere from 6 hours to 2 weeks. We're working hard to speed up how quickly you hear back — in general, verified trials respond to patients within a few days.