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Nivolumab releases the inhibition of the immune system against human cancers. Dramatic and sustained activity has been observed in advanced lung cancer. Ablation may stimulate the immune system by exposing new tumor antigens. Since tumors that express PD-L1 may be more likely to respond to nivolumab, if ablation increases PD-L1 expression (which has not been studied) this treatment may enhance the activity of nivolumab at both the treated site and in other, non-treated, tumors. Ablation is already an FDA approved treatment for cancer. Nivolumab was recently FDA approved for second line treatment of advanced squamous cell NSCLC. The goal of the study will be to determine if the combination of nivolumab and ablation has higher systemic activity than previously reported with nivolumab alone.
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Inclusion criteria
A) Progression after at least 1 line of systemic treatment (IV or oral) for metastatic or locally advanced disease. Must provide documentation systemic treatment was for either locally advanced or metastatic and also scan or assessment to show progression. Radiation does not count as 1 line.
B) Patients progressing within 6 months of completion of neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy are also eligible without having treatment for metastatic disease (for example patient with stage I disease undergoes resection, receives systemic chemotherapy and then progresses to the liver (now stage IV) within 6 months of chemotherapy). Radiation does not count as 1 line.
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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