Impact of treatment size and therapy type in phase II clinical trials of non-small cell lung cancer

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Brac University

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Abstract

In spite of recent developments in cancer therapy that are specifically targeted, a frightening number of individuals still pass away every year from lung cancer around the world. Because of this, we decided to focus our research on non-small cell lung cancer. As a consequence of the high degree of heterogeneity that characterizes lung carcinoma, the unsatisfied clinical need is the determination of a suitable combination of medications. The requirement for the validation of efficacy endpoint methods in clinical trials, which are methods by which the effectiveness of cancer medicines is determined, is one possible cause of the problem that was described above. We intend to help investigators design clinical trials by establishing two predictive efficacy models, and we plan to optimize the combination treatment for certain lung malignancies by examining a substantial amount of clinical trial efficacy data. This will allow us to do both.

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Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (page 16).
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Pharmacy, 2023.

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Thesis