The First Affiliated Hospital Of Guangzhou Medical University
Clinical trials sponsored by The First Affiliated Hospital Of Guangzhou Medical University, explained in plain language.
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Breathing without a tube: new strategy aims to speed lung transplant recovery
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests whether a 'tubeless' anesthesia and surgery method helps adults with end-stage lung disease recover faster after a lung transplant. Instead of a breathing tube and deep sedation, patients breathe on their own during and after surgery. About 110 participants at se…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 10:05 UTC
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New breathing strategy may boost lung transplant survival
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study looks at whether keeping patients breathing on their own during lung transplant surgery can help them recover faster and survive better. It involves 40 adults with end-stage lung disease who need a rescue transplant. Researchers will track how many need a breathing tub…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 10:04 UTC
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New lung transplant technique aims to help seniors breathe on their own sooner
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study looks at whether keeping patients breathing on their own during lung transplant surgery helps them recover faster. It involves 60 adults aged 70 and older with end-stage lung disease. The goal is to see if this approach reduces the need for a breathing machine after su…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:57 UTC
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New hope for lung cancer patients with dangerous blood side effects
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests a drug called golidocitinib in 16 people with advanced lung cancer who have severe blood problems caused by their immunotherapy. The goal is to see if the drug can safely reverse these blood side effects. Participants must be at least 18 and have stable cancer.
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:51 UTC
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New breathing approach may boost lung transplant recovery for frail patients
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study looks at whether a special breathing technique during and after lung transplant surgery can help very underweight patients recover faster. It involves 56 adults with end-stage lung disease and a very low body mass index. The goal is to see if this approach reduces the …
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 08:20 UTC
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Breathing in a Cancer-Fighting virus: new hope for lung nodules?
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests a new way to treat multiple ground-glass lung nodules—small spots that can turn into lung cancer. Patients inhale a mist containing a modified virus that delivers a healthy p53 gene to the lungs. The goal is to shrink or eliminate the nodules. About 38 adults wit…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 22, 2026 14:01 UTC
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New hope for hard-to-treat lung cancer? drug duo targets HER2 mutations
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study is for people with advanced non-small cell lung cancer that has a specific change called HER2 (mutation, amplification, or overexpression) and has gotten worse after at least one prior treatment. Participants will receive two drugs, SHR-A1811 and pertuzumab, to see if …
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 22, 2026 13:53 UTC
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Robots and keyhole surgery join forces to tackle lung nodules
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests a new way to treat people who have several lung nodules. It combines robot-assisted heat treatment or dye marking with a less invasive surgery that avoids a breathing tube. The goal is to see if this approach is safe and can be done successfully. About 30 adults …
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 22, 2026 13:51 UTC
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New hope for lung cancer patients with brain tumors: drug-radiation combo enters trial
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests a new drug called limertinib combined with radiation therapy as a first treatment for people with a specific type of lung cancer (EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer) that has spread to the brain. The goal is to see if the combination can better control brain …
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 18, 2026 12:02 UTC
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Immune cell combo shows promise in shrinking lung tumors before surgery
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis early-phase study tests a new treatment for people with operable non-small cell lung cancer. It combines NK010 immune cells, an immunotherapy drug (PD-1 antibody), and standard chemotherapy given before surgery to shrink tumors. The main goals are to check safety and see how…
Phase: PHASE1 • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 08, 2026 12:00 UTC
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Shingles vaccine may shield lung cancer patients from infection and boost survival
Prevention Not yet recruitingThis study looks at whether the shingles vaccine can prevent shingles and improve survival in 500 lung cancer patients. Researchers will track how many get shingles within a year and check survival rates over time. The goal is to see if the vaccine is safe and effective for this …
Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Prevention
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:55 UTC
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No tubes, faster healing: new lung surgery trial aims to boost recovery
Symptom relief Not yet recruitingThis study tests a 'tubeless' approach for people having minimally invasive lung surgery to remove small nodules. Instead of using breathing tubes and chest drains, the new method uses a simpler airway device and skips the chest tube. The goal is to see if this helps patients rec…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:55 UTC
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Herbal granule trial aims to ease breathing for lung disease patients
Symptom relief Not yet recruitingThis study tests whether a Chinese herbal medicine called Lifei Qingchang Granules can help people with stable bronchiectasis breathe easier and feel better. About 150 adults who have had at least one flare-up in the past year will take either the granules or a placebo for 3 mont…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:54 UTC
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No tube, better recovery? new lung surgery study tests tubeless approach
Symptom relief Not yet recruitingThis study looks at whether avoiding a chest tube after keyhole lung surgery (VATS) helps patients recover faster and feel less pain. About 300 adults having a wedge resection for a lung nodule will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: standard chest tube, one-time suctio…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:53 UTC
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Breathing tube or not? new study aims to make esophageal cancer surgery safer
Symptom relief Not yet recruitingThis study tests whether using a laryngeal mask (no breathing tube) during esophageal cancer surgery is as safe and effective as the standard method with a breathing tube. About 500 adults aged 18-75 with resectable esophageal cancer will be randomly assigned to one of two anesth…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 26, 2026 09:50 UTC
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Could breathing on your own during lung surgery lead to faster recovery?
Symptom relief Not yet recruitingThis study compares a newer anesthesia method where patients breathe on their own during lung surgery to the traditional method using a breathing tube and machine. About 1,600 adults with small lung nodules will be randomly assigned to one of the two methods. The goal is to see i…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 11, 2026 20:53 UTC