View clinical trials related to Lymphoma.
Filter by:Evaluation the safety and efficacy of CD19/CD20 bispecific CAR-T cells in patients with relapsed/refractory B cell lymphoma
A multicenter, open, one-arm clinical study evaluated the efficacy and safety of Jinyouli in preventing neutropenia after chemotherapy in elderly lymphoma patients who met the criteria for admission. Chemotherapy regimen: The investigator selected according to the specific condition the corresponding standard chemotherapy regimen, the chemotherapy regimen used, FN risk ≥ 20%, or 10% < FN risk < 20% with at least one high risk factor for FN, from the first cycle of chemotherapy, 24-72 after chemotherapy hour subcutaneous injection of Jinyouli.
REALYSA cohort is a population-based epidemiological platform in real-life for lymphomas designed to enrich prognostic data, by integrating together epidemiological, clinical and biological data. REALYSA is a platform perfectly set up to - Study prognostic factors using integrated epidemiological and biological data (genetics), to better characterize the determinants of refractoriness and relapse in patients with lymphoma, to follow the growing number of survivors and describe median to long-term sequela, second cancer, quality of life (QoL)… - Document treatment effectiveness in real life and observance - Address socio-economical questions
Central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is a diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) entity with a particularly poor prognosis (median survival less than 3 years). They are still poorly characterized biologically, largely because of their rarity (300 cases / year in France) and the difficulty for obtaining a material of sufficient quality and quantity. It is nevertheless assumed that their pathophysiology is particular, since they develop exclusively in an immunological sanctuary, and that they present some characteristic molecular abnormalities (mutation of MYD88 or TBL1XR1 for example). A collection of 74 PCNSLs has created, clinically annotated, from which frozen material is available in addition to the material fixed and included in paraffin (cohort ALYCE). Informed consent was gathered for all patients. Comparative Genomic Hybridization-array analysis of this cohort has already revealed abnormalities associated with a poor prognosis (unpublished data). The objective of this study is to complete this analysis by sequencing a panel of 96 mutant genes recurrently in DLBCLs and PCNSLs, and the molecular determination of the original cell by the (RT-MLPA) Reverse Transcriptase-Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification technique. The integration of genetic, molecular and transcriptomic data may define prognostic markers and open perspectives for translational research in PCNSL.
The goal of this phase II clinical study is to learn about the safety of inotuzumab ozogamicin when given with fludarabine, with or without bendamustine, melphalan, and rituximab before and after a stem cell transplant. Researchers also want to learn if inotuzumab ozogamicin when given after a stem cell transplant can help control leukemia and lymphoma. Inotuzumab ozogamicin is a monoclonal antibody, called inotuzumab, linked to a chemotherapy drug called ozogamicin. Inotuzumab attaches to CD22-positive cancer cells in a targeted way and delivers ozogamicin to kill them. Giving chemotherapy before a bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplant helps stop the growth of cells in the bone marrow, including normal blood-forming cells (stem cells) and cancer cells. Sometimes the transplanted cells from a donor attack the body's normal cells (called graft-versus-host disease). Giving tacrolimus and filgrastim before or after the transplant may stop this from happening. Fludarabine, bendamustine, melphalan, and rituximab are commonly given before stem cell transplants. Giving inotuzumab ozogamicin with chemotherapy may work better in treating patients with leukemia or lymphoma undergoing stem cell transplantation.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and clinical activity of anti-CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cells (KD-019 CAR-T)infusion in the treatment of relapsed/refractory B-cell Lymphoma and B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL).
This is a phase l/ll multi-centric, single arm, prospective open, dose-escalation study in patients with relapsed or refractory CD19-positive B cell malignancies (ALL, NHL, CLL). The trial will include adult and pediatric patients. The trial consists of 2 parts: Part I and Part II. In total approximately 48 patients will be included in Part I of the trial. There will be three individual cohorts, defined by disease biology: pediatric ALL and aggressive pediatric NHL (Cohort 1), adult ALL (Cohort 2) and adult NHL/CLL (Cohort 3).
This study is an open, multi-dose, dose escalation and cohort expansion, phase Ⅰ study to investigate the safety, tolerability, efficiency, pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity of SG001 in subjects with advanced tumours.
The present project aims at comparing two conditioning regimens (FM-PTCy vs FM-ATG). The hypothesis is that one or the two regimens will lead to a 2-year cGRFS rate improvement from 30% (the cGRFS rate with FM without ATG/PTCy) to 45% (Pick-a-winner phase 2 randomized study).
The purpose of this study is to determine the recommended phase 2 dose of the drug Vorinostat in children, adolescents and young adults following allogeneic blood or marrow transplant (BMT) and determine whether the addition of Vorinostat to the standard graft versus host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis will reduce the incidence of GVHD.