View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, B-cell.
Filter by:The EAP is for patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large b-cell lymphoma (R/R DLBCL) that cannot be treated by currently available drugs, cell therapy, or clinical trials. ADC Therapeutics will evaluate patients for approval into the program.
The study is to investigate the safety and efficacy of Zanubrutinib combined with Tislelizumab in the treatment of relapsed/refractory primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma and Epstein-Barr Virus-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
This study is a multicenter phase II trial including 2 cohorts of patients in Refractory/Relapse disease at least 1 month after CAR T-cells therapy: - cohort 1: DLBCL patients - cohort 2: PMBL, mantle cell lymphoma, transformed indolent NHL (t-iNHL) or iNHL CAR T-cells Refractory/Relapse status will be determined by PET-CT central review allowing inclusion in this trial. Patients enrolled will then receive a pre-phase of obinutuzumab followed by experimental treatment:11 cycle of glofitamab. The primary objective of the study is to assess the anti-lymphoma activity of glofitamab, a bispecific CD3xCD20 monoclonal antibody in patients with relapse/refractory DLBCL (cohort 1) disease after anti-CD19 CAR T-cells therapy
This is an open-label, phase 1/2 study has the primary objective of decitabine-primed tandem CART 19/20 in patients with B-NHL who were confirmed as r/r B cell Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma. A total of 19 to 33 patients are planned to be enrolled and receive decitabine-primed tandem CART 19/20 cell infusion. Phase 1 (9 to 18 cases) is dose escalation part, and phase 2 (10 to 15 cases) is expansion cohort part.
This is a single center, single arm, open-label, phase I study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of CD19/CD20 Dual-CAR-T cells in patients with refractory or relapsed B-NHL.
To compare the efficacy outcomes of the L-MIND cohort with the effectiveness in a matched patient population treated with systemic NCCN/ESMO guideline listed regimens administered in routine clinical care.
This trial is a translational, prospective, open-label, monocentric research. The study will be conducted in a population of 60 patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) for whom first-line treatment with R-CHOP is planned as part of their standard of care. SIMILY program aims at identifying biomarkers and/or molecular signatures related to immuno-phenotypic and -genotypic characteristics of the tumor and immune microenvironment, at the time of diagnosis, during R-CHOP, and at 24 months or time of progression. Each patient will be followed during 2 years.
This is a single-center, open-label study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of C-CAR039 in relapsed and/or refractory B-NHL patients.
Annually some 450 patients are diagnosed with Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL), in Denmark. The majority of these patients are cured with immunochemotherapy, but up to 30 % will relapse, pointing to the need for targeted surveillance and follow-up strategy. However, this strategy is constantly under debate illustrated by the missing data supporting scheduled face-to-face meetings with a clinician and routine surveillance scans in order to detect relapse. On top of the clinical problems comes the psychological burden for patients enrolled in routine surveillance. This points to the need for the development of evidence-based follow-up programs both in terms of content, regularity and assignment of responsibility between the health system and the patient. In a prospective cohort study, the investigators will collect Patient Reported Outcome (PRO) measures investigating if questionnaires can be used to detect relapse in DLBCL patients. Furthermore psychological aspects of follow-up are explored.
This is a single-arm, open label, dose escalation, phase I study of C-CAR039 in adults with relapsed/refractory B-cell Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma.