View clinical trials related to Lymphoma.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of ME-401 in the treatment of Japanese participants with Relapsed or Refractory indolent B-Cell Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma and to continue administraion of ME-401 to patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell NHL with collecting safety information
This phase II/III trial tests whether it is possible to decrease the chance of high-grade B-cell lymphomas returning or getting worse by adding a new drug, venetoclax to the usual combination of drugs used for treatment. Venetoclax may stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking a protein called Bcl-2. Drugs used in usual chemotherapy, such as rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone, and etoposide, work in different ways to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Giving venetoclax together with usual chemotherapy may work better than usual chemotherapy alone in treating patients with high-grade B-cell lymphomas, and may increase the chance of cancer going into remission and not returning.
This study is a single-arm, open-label, phase I/II trial designed to find a CMP-001 dose that, in combination with pembrolizumab, has optimal clinical efficacy and acceptable toxicity for patients with relapsed and refractory lymphomas.
The trial will investigate the combination of venetoclax, obinutuzumab and lenalidomide in patients with treatment-naïve follicular lymphoma. Patients will receive induction treatment for 0.5 years with venetoclax, obinutuzumab and lenalidomide followed by maintenance treatment for upto 2 years. Maintenance treatment will be determined by the response at the end of induction. Following completion of treatment patients will be followed up for 3 years after the last patient completes induction treatment.
DLBCL has the highest frequency out of all lymphoid malignancies. With the recent development of antitumor agents targeting intracellular/extracellular cell signaling pathways, patients have access to various treatment options after relapse. Therefore, for the purpose of developing effective treatment strategies, large-scale genomic data accumulation is necessary to understand the mechanism of relapse and refractory state of DLBCL.
To evaluate if hyper-fractionated TBI or TMLI followed by Treg/Tcon adoptive immunotherapy improve cGvHD/disease free survival after allogeneic HSCT in patients affected by high-risk acute leukemias or other hematologic malignancy where HSCT is indicated.
The primary objective of the current study is to demonstrate the equivalent efficacy of rituximab (DRL_RI) and MabThera® in subjects with Low Tumor Burden Follicular Lymphoma (LTB-FL). Also evaluated by Pharmacokinetic, safety, and immunogenicity assessment between a proposed biosimilar (DRL_RI) and the RMP, as an component of clinical study program, and collectively providing the evidence of biosimilarity. The study will compare the safety and efficacy of DRL_RI vs MabThera in patients with Low Tumor Burden Follicular Lymphoma (LTB-FL). The primary objective is to establish comparative efficacy as measured by ORR up to week 28
Doxil or Doxorubicin to be administered was administered in a dose of 50 mg/m2 as infusion over 15 minutes. Blood samples to be obtained at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 12, 24, 48 and 72 hours
The purpose of this dose-escalation study is to assess the safety and tolerability of treatment with Chiauranib and Chidamide administered orally over a range of doses in patients with relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, in the meantime, exploring the pharmacodynamic profile and latent biomarkers accompany with Chiauranib and Chidamide , as well as the relevancy of which and clinical benefit.
The diagnosis of lymphoma bone marrow infiltration is very important for the staging and treatment mode of lymphoma. Traditional bone marrow cytology and pathology examinations are only performed locally, and missed diagnosis is possible. The study explore the value of multi-parameter pelvic magnetic resonance in detecting bone marrow infiltration with newly diagnosed lymphoma patients . This study also explore the consistency of pelvic magnetic resonance and PET/CT for detection of lymphoma bone marrow infiltration.