View clinical trials related to Lymphoma.
Filter by:This research is being done to study the safety of implanting and retrieving a microdevice that releases up to 19 drugs directly within a cancerous lesion as a possible tool to evaluate the effectiveness of several approved cancer drugs against cutaneous T cell lymphoma and peripheral T cell lymphoma
This phase III trial studies the side effects of sintilimab to see how well it works when given together with ifosfamide, carboplatin, and etoposide in treating patients with classic Hodgkin lymphoma that does not respond to first-line standard chemotherapy.
Primary objectives: - Randomization R1, all patients eligible: To examine, whether the cumulative incidence of relapses with involvement of the CNS (CNS relapse, pCICR) can be decreased by a modified induction therapy including dexamethasone (experimental arm) instead of prednisone (standard arm) - Randomization R2, only patients with high risk LBL eligible: to examine, whether the probability of event-free survival (pEFS) in these patients can be improved by receiving an intensified treatment arm versus a standard treatment arm (as used in the EURO-LB 02)
To observe the safety, tolerability and clinical effects of PD-1, chidamide, lenalidomide and gemcitabine in the treatment of newly diagnosed and relapse/refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma.
To observe the safety, tolerability and clinical effects of PD-1 Antibody, Chidamide, Lenalidomide and Etoposide in Relapsed or Refractory NK/T cell Lymphoma.
This is a first-in-human trial proposed to test CD19-specific CAR-T cells with edited endogenous HPK1 (XYF19 CAR-T cells) in patients with relapsed or refractory CD19+ leukemia or lymphoma. This is an investigational study designed as a single-center, open-label and single-arm clinical trial.
Ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) is a multisystem disease with diverse manifestations, including progressive neurodegeneration, immunodeficiency, respiratory disease, and genomic instability. One of the most important features of A-T is the increased predisposition to cancer, especially to lymphoid malignancies. Patients with A-T are generally excluded from collaborative clinical trials, their treatment outcomes and toxicity profiles have rarely been reported, and little is currently known concerning the treatment intensity required to provide a reasonable balance between efficacy and toxicity. The aims of this study are to build a large international de-identified database of children with A-T treated for leukemia and lymphoma, to investigate epidemiology and outcome of treatment, toxicity profiles and risk factors which impact outcome, in order to eventually enable the generation of data-based treatment recommendations for this population.
The purpose of this clinical trial is to assess the feasibility, safety and efficacy of CAR T cell therapy against CD7-positive hematological malignancies using CD7 specific CAR T cells. The study also aims to learn more about the function of CD7 CAR T cells and their persistence in patients of hematological malignancies.
This study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of autologous γδT cells in patients with relapsed or refractory B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL), chronic lymphoblastic leukemia (CLL) and peripheral T cell lymphoma (PTCL) expect for γδT lymphoma.
The DP regimen, low-dose decitabine combined with SHR-1210, is the new treatment for relapsed or refractory classical Hodgkin's Lymphoma. Though the CR rate of this regimen is impressively high, which is verified more than 70% in our I/II phase study, there are also lots of patients cannot benefit from this treatment. On top of that, as the increasing utilization of mono-therapy or combination treatment with the immune checkpoint blockade (ICB), the adverse reactions associated with immunotherapy make it unavailable in parts of patients. The application of MOAP regimen to patients, who have a progressive disease after DP regimen, can bring high CR rate. MOAP can be the a rescue treatment for cHL resisted to DP treatment.