View clinical trials related to Lymphoma.
Filter by:The primary objective of this study is to characterize the safety and tolerability of loncastuximab tesirine in combination with polatuzumab vedotin, glofitamab, or mosunetuzumab, and to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and/or recommended dose for expansion (RDE) for the combinations.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of fixed duration pirtobruitinib (LOXO-305) with VR (Arm A) compared to VR alone (Arm B) in patients with CLL/SLL who have been previously treated with at least one prior line of therapy. Participation could last up to five years.
This single-arm phase II interventional study aims to assess disease response to, and toxicity of, a combination of obinutuzumab and atezolizumab, with or without radiotherapy, in treatment naive Follicular Lymphoma. The study will involve an induction phase and a maintenance phase for responding participants, for up to 24 months. Response to treatment will be monitored using medical imaging and clinical assessment.
GVHD remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality following SCT. The current standard of care for prophylaxis against GVHD includes tacrolimus and methotrexate. This study proposes to utilize acalabrutinib, a Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, for GVHD prophylaxis following allogeneic SCT. The hypothesis is that the addition of acalabrutinib to our institutional standard GVHD prophylaxis (tacrolimus and methotrexate) is safe, feasible, and effective in reducing both the incidence and severity of acute GVHD.
This phase Ib/II trial is evaluating the efficacy and side effect of orelabrutinib and sintilimab as possible treatments for relapsed or refractory central nervous system lymphoma.
The next-generation sequencing (NGS) based on liquid biopsy has been an emerging technology to identify tumor-specific genetic aberrations in malignant tumors. The tumor tissue (FFPE) and plasma samples from the newly diagnosed pediatric mature B-NHL patients were collected and sequenced by 475 genes panel before, during and post treatment, to evaluate the significance of the ctDNA in efficacy prediction, predicting recurrence or mechanism of resistance to chemotherapy for pediatric mature B-NHL.
The aim of the present trial is to evaluate the effect of lifestyle changes on the natural history of indolent lymphomas, during the period of watchful waiting. The intervention program is comprised of specifically designed vegan nutrition, physical activity, mostly aerobic, and stress reduction by relaxation and meditation. Outcome results will be followed and analyzed for 3 years, taking into consideration the following parameters - disease burden, specific disease-related symptoms, relevant blood tests, body weight, indicators of well-being. Changes in these parameters will be correlated with the level of compliance and adherence to the intervention program. The results of the trial group of patients will be further compared to the natural history of the disease in a comparable group of patients during their waiting period who were not subject to the above intervention.
Lymphoid chronic B-cell malignancies are frequent pathologies that affect adults, with a very variable prognosis and treatment (some of them can remain untreated). The diagnosis of these malignancies relies on the study of the morphology of tumoral cells and the expression by these cells of several markers, mainly via a technical approach called flow cytometry. Because the markers currently used remain imperfect, additional ones are needed for an accurate diagnosis that affect both prognosis and treatment. In addition, because numerous markers are used at the diagnosis, there is a need of tools that synthetize the multi-dimensional structure of the data obtained. The primary purpose of this study is to detect new markers that can be of help for the diagnosis of Marginal Zone Lymphoma and other B-cell chronic lymphoid malignancies. The secondary purpose of this study is to obtain a statistical algorithm that allow a good prediction of the different sub-types of chronic B-cell malignancies mainly using the results of flow cytometry.
This study involved patients that have a cancer called diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), NK and T cell lymphomas (NK/TL) or classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) (hereafter these 3 diseases will be referred to as lymphoma). Patients lymphoma has come back or not gone away after treatment. Because there is no standard treatment for the patients cancer at this time or because the currently used treatments do not work fully in all cases, the patients are being asked to volunteer in this research study. In this study the investigators want to test a type of T cell made from a normal donor. The T cells the investigators will use are called Epstein Barr virus (EBV) specific T cells (EBVSTs) and are cells that the investigators have trained in the laboratory to recognize a EBV which is the virus that causes mono or kissing disease. Some patients with lymphoma have EBV in their cancer cells. Researchers have given T cell lines from normal donor EBVSTs to lymphoma patients who have EBV in their lymphoma cells and have seen responses in about half the patients. The cells have have been generated and are frozen in a bank. The cells are called "allogeneic" (meaning the donor is not related to the patient). CD30.CAR in EBV-specific T cells (called allogeneic CD30.CAR-EBVST) from the blood of healthy donors. The investigators are giving the cells to patients with lymphoma cells that express CD30. If the lymphoma cells also express EBV there may be some benefit from targeting both proteins. The purpose of this study is to find out the highest safe dose of allogeneic CD30.CAR-EBVST cells given following chemotherapy and used to treat lymphoma. The investigators will learn the side effects of CD30.CAR-EBVST cells in patients and see whether this therapy may help lymphoma patients.
The study is evaluating the efficacy, and safety of SHR1459 combined with YY-20394 for Recurrent and refractory B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in adults.