View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, Extranodal NK-T-Cell.
Filter by:The purpose of this multi-center, single arm, phase Ⅱ clinical trail is to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of concurrent chemoradiotherapy by using single-drug pegaspargase for patients with ENKTL in stage IE to IIE.
The purpose of this registry study is to create a database-a collection of information-for better understanding T-cell lymphoma. Researchers will use the information from this database to learn more about how to improve outcomes for people with T-cell lymphoma.
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of anti-CD56-CAR T in the treatment of relapsed refractory NK/T cell lymphoma /NK cell leukemia
This clinical trial intends to analyze the efficacy of PD-1 inhibitor combined with radiotherapy for newly diagnosed NK/T-cell lymphoma. The investigational product in this clinical trial is tislelizumab, a PD-1 inhibitor. As a rationale for using PD-1 inhibitors in patients with NK/T-cell lymphoma, their efficacy has been proved several times mostly in patients with relapsed NK/T-cell lymphoma. Patients with low-stage NK/T-cell lymphoma usually receive high-concentration cytotoxic chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy, with treatment response rates of approximately 60 to 80%, but 80-90% of them experience hematological and non-hematologic toxicities during treatment. Therefore, this study intends to determine the efficacy and safety of PD-1 inhibitor(Tislelizumab) combined with radiotherapy as a first-line therapy compared with pre-existing cytotoxic chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy in patients with NK/T-cell lymphoma with low stage and International Prognostic Index.
This is a multicenter, first-in-human, Phase 1/2 study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and anti-tumor activity of DR-01 in adult patients with large granular lymphocytic leukemia or cytotoxic lymphomas
Effective treatment options for relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (T-NHL) represent a significant unmet medical need. CAR T therapy has offered durable remissions and potential cures in some forms of hematologic malignancy, including B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In AML, however, CAR T approaches have been limited by the lack of suitable antigens, as most myeloid markers are shared with normal hematopoietic stem cells and targeting of these antigens by CAR T therapy leads to undesirable hematologic toxicity. Similarly, T-NHL has not yet benefited from CAR T therapy due to a lack of suitable markers. One potential therapeutic target is CD7, which is expressed normally on mature T-cells and NK-cells but is also aberrantly expressed on ~30% of acute myeloid leukemias. CAR T therapy for patients with CD7+ AML and T-NHL will potentially offer a new therapeutic option which has a chance of offering durable benefit. WU-CART-007 is a CD7-directed, genetically modified, allogeneic, fratricide-resistant chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell product for the treatment of CD7+ hematologic malignancies. These cells have two key changes from conventional, autologous CAR T-cells. First, because CD7 is present on normal T-cells including conventional CAR T products, CD7 is deleted from WU CART-007. This allows for targeting of CD7 without the risk of fratricide (killing of WU-CART-007 cells by other WU-CART-007 cells). Second, the T cell receptor alpha constant (TRAC) is also deleted. This makes WU CART 007 cells incapable of recognizing antigens other than CD7 and allows for the use of an allogeneic product without causing Graft-versus-Host-Disease (GvHD).
This is a Phase II, single-arm study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and PK of oral linperlisib (YY-20394) monotherapy in adult patients with R/R Peripheral T/NK Cell Lymphoma. The study will be conducted at approximately 15 sites in United States.
The current study is a phase II multi-center single arm trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of inductive Anti-PD-1+P-GEMOX treatment followed by radiotherapy and concurrent Anti-PD-1 antibody in early-stage high-risk extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma, nasal type
The current study is a phase II multi-center single arm trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of adding Anti-PD-1 antibody in an inductive and concurrent way to radiotherapy in early-stage low-risk extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma, nasal type
To observe the efficacy and safety of Ruxolitinib and Etoposide combined with DDGP regimen ( cis-Platinum, Dexamethasone, Gemcitabine and Pegaspargase) in the first-line induction therapy of T cell lymphoma and NK/T cell lymphoma-associated hemophagocytic syndrome.