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Radiotherapy Plus Anti-PD-1 Versus Anti-PD-1 Alone in ypTanyN⁺M0 NSCLC
Sponsor: Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital
Summary
Patients with stage III non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who receive neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy may achieve good response in the primary tumor but still have residual nodal disease after surgery (ypTanyN⁺M0), which is associated with poor prognosis in retrospective analyses from our center. In prior trials such as LungART and PORT-C, postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) did not improve disease-free survival in completely resected stage IIIA-N2 NSCLC after adjuvant chemotherapy, suggesting that PORT should not be used indiscriminately. However, recent preclinical and translational data indicate that radiotherapy can enhance antitumor immunity, remodel the tumor microenvironment, and synergize with immune checkpoint inhibitors via immunogenic cell death, improved T-cell trafficking, and tertiary lymphoid structure formation. This single-center randomized phase II study will evaluate whether adding postoperative involved-field nodal radiotherapy to standard PD-1 maintenance therapy can improve disease-free survival compared with PD-1 maintenance alone in patients with ypTanyN⁺M0 NSCLC after neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy and R0 resection.
Official title: Postoperative Involved-field Nodal Radiotherapy Plus Anti-PD-1 Maintenance Versus Anti-PD-1 Maintenance Alone in Patients With ypTanyN⁺M0 NSCLC After Neoadjuvant Chemoimmunotherapy and R0 Resection: A Single-center Randomized Phase II Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 75 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
38
Start Date
2026-06-01
Completion Date
2032-06-01
Last Updated
2026-01-20
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
radiotherapy
Postoperative external beam radiotherapy to regional draining lymph nodes (e.g., ipsilateral mediastinal and hilar nodal stations involved or at high risk), based on pre-treatment imaging and surgical/pathologic findings. Suggested dose: 50-54 Gy in 25-27 fractions (2.0-2.16 Gy per fraction, once daily, 5 days per week), delivered with 3D-CRT or IMRT per institutional standards.
PD -1/PD-L1 monoclonal antibody
Anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody administered intravenously every 3 weeks for up to 1 year (or until disease recurrence, unacceptable toxicity, or withdrawal). The specific agent and dose will follow the neoadjuvant regimen and local regulatory approval.