View clinical trials related to Lymphoma.
Filter by:This open-label, single arm study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of anti-PD-1 antibody in combination with pegaspargase in treatment of newly diagnosed advanced stage NK/T-cell lymphoma.
Phase 1 will evaluate the safety and tolerability at different dose levels of repotrectinib in pediatric and young adult subjects with advanced or metastatic malignancies harboring anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), receptor tyrosine kinase encoded by the gene ROS1 (ROS1), or neurotrophic receptor kinase genes encoding TRK kinase family (NTRK1-3) alterations to estimate the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) or Maximum Administered Dose (MAD) and select the Pediatric Recommended Phase 2 Dose (RP2D). Phase 2 will determine the anti-tumor activity of repotrectinib in pediatric and young adult subjects with advanced or metastatic malignancies harboring ROS1 or NTRK1-3 alterations.
NCCN guidelines for B cell lymphoma suggest that patients with relapsed/refractory aggressive NHL who are candidate for high-dose therapy should receive combination of cytotoxic chemotherapies as 2nd line treatment. However, proportion of patients who are adequately salvaged by second line chemotherapy and high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell rescue is unsatisfactory. Moreover, many fragile patients are unfit for salvage cytotoxic chemotherapy and/or high-dose chemotherapy. Hence, most of patients with relapsed/refractory aggressive B-cell NHL is ultimately candidate for less-cytotoxic drugs with targeted approach. This trial is phase II trial of acalabrutinib in combination with rituximab and lenalidomide for these patients.
This is a non-interventional, Phase 4 study designed to improve understanding of current clinical practice in the treatment of CLL/SLL and to describe treatment pattern and evaluate outcomes of ibrutinib-treated CLL patients in China. This study will include both retrospective and prospective data collection.
A clinical study of safety and efficacy of treatment with Nivolumab and DHAP in patients with relapsed/refractory Hodgkin's lymphoma
In the early years of life and during adolescence, physical activity is crucial for good development of motor skills. It is even more so for those children and young people who are forced to undergo anti-cancer therapies and therefore undergo long periods of hospitalization (often bedridden) and prolonged periods of physical inactivity. The research project "Sport Therapy" was born with the aim of demonstrating that, through targeted physical activity administered by the sports physician in collaboration with the pediatrician hematologist, it is possible to facilitate the full recovery of these patients, avoiding the high risk of chronic diseases related to a sedentary lifestyle and allowing them to better reintegrate, once healed, in their community of origin (school, sport and social relations). The research project "Sport Therapy" was born within the Maria Letizia Verga Center at the Pediatric Clinic of the University of Milan Bicocca, at the Foundation for the Mother and Her Child, San Gerardo Hospital in Monza. Every year, around 80 children and adolescents with leukemia, lymphoma or blood disorders leading to bone marrow transplantation are treated here.
CC-95775-ST-001 is an open-label, Phase 1B, dose escalation and expansion study of CC-95775 in subjects with advanced or unresectable solid tumors, including laBCC, and relapsed/ refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). The dose escalation part (Part A) of the study will explore escalating oral doses of CC-95775 administered on a 4d on/24d off schedule to estimate the MTD of CC-95775. A mTPI-2 will help guide CC-95775 dose escalation decisions with the final decisions made by an SRC. Approximately 20 subjects will be enrolled. The expansion cohort (Part B) will evaluate the safety, PK, PD safety and preliminary activity of CC-95775 in advanced solid tumors, including laBCC. Approximately 20 subjects will be enrolled.
This is a phase II, open-label, single-arm, multicenter study to asess the efficacy and safety of JWCAR029 in adult R/R Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma subjects in China.
The primary purpose of this study is to test whether CD22-CAR T cells can be successfully made from immune cells collected from adults with relapsed/refractory B-cell malignancies (leukemia and lymphoma).
The primary purpose of this study is to test whether CD22-CAR T cells can be successfully made from immune cells collected from pediatric and young adult subjects with relapsed/refractory B-cell malignancies (leukemia and lymphoma). Another purpose of this study is to test the safety and cancer killing ability of a cell therapy against a new cancer target (CD22).