View clinical trials related to B-Cell Malignancies.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety of zanubrutinib regimens in participants with B-cell malignancies who participated in a BeiGene parent study for zanubrutinib.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the immune response to an influenza vaccine in adults with B-cell malignancies who are currently receiving treatment with idelalisib in a Gilead-sponsored study (parent study).
This study is to determine the safety, including potential dose limiting toxicities, and efficiency of ET019002-T cells and the duration of in vivo survival of ET019002-T cells in patients with relapsed/refractory B-Cell Malignancies.
The study will evaluate safety and efficacy of a combination of 4th generation chimeric antigen receptor gene-modified T cells targeting CD19 (4SCAR19) and CD20 (4SCAR20), CD22 (4SCAR22), CD30 (4SCAR30), CD38 (4SCAR38), CD70 (4SCAR70) or CD123 (4SCAR123) for patients with B cell malignancies. Clinical response and development of a standardized lentiviral vector and cell production protocol will be investigated. This is a phase I/II trial enrolling patients from multiple clinical centers.
The study will evaluate safety and efficacy of a 4th generation chimeric antigen receptor gene-modified T cells targeting CD19 (4SCAR19) for patients with B cell malignancies. Clinical response and development of a standardized lentiviral vector and cell production protocol will be investigated. This is a phase I/II trial enrolling patients from multiple clinical centers.
The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of tirabrutinib (ONO/GS-4059) in combination with other targeted anti-cancer therapies and to evaluate the long-term safety of tirabrutinib as a monotherapy and in combination with other targeted anti-cancer therapies in adults with relapsed or refractory B-cell lymphoproliferative malignancies. This study consists of three parts: Dose Escalation, Dose Expansion, and Long-term Safety Monitoring. During the Dose Escalation phase, participants will be sequentially enrolled in a standard 3 + 3 dose escalation study design, to receive oral tirabrutinib combined with idelalisib entospletinib +/- obinutuzumab. The Dose Expansion Phase will enroll additional participants with a single B-cell lymphoproliferative malignancy disease type to further evaluate efficacy, safety, tolerability, PK, and pharmacodynamics. The Long-term Safety Monitoring phase will evaluate the long-term safety of tirabrutinib both as a monotherapy and in combination with other anti-cancer therapies. As of Amendment 9, all participants currently on the study who have no clinical evidence of disease progression will transition into long-term safety monitoring. Participants from the ongoing Study GS-US-401-1787 and participants who came off Study GS-US-401-1757 and Study GS-US-401-1787 but continued to receive treatment via named patient use (or individual expanded use) will be enrolled into the long-term safety monitoring group (Group VI). Participants enrolled in Group VI will continue the same treatment regimen in Study GS-US-401-1787 or named patient use (or individual expanded use). As of Protocol Amendment 8, the maximum treatment duration for any participant is an additional 6 years from the date of this amendment (ie. until November 2025). As of Amendment 9, entospletinib will be provided until 31 December 2020 to participants who are currently receiving entospletinib. Participants treated with entospletinib as part of a combination regimen with tirabrutinib will stop receiving entospletinib by 31 December 2020 but may continue to be treated with tirabrutinib monotherapy. Idelalisib will be provided as 50 mg tablets until 31 December 2020 and 100 mg tablets until study completion. Participants assigned to the 50 mg tablet will be given the option, at the investigator's discretion, to switch to 100 mg once daily idelalisib dose.
This study evaluated the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and efficacy of BGB-3111 in participants with B-cell lymphoid malignancies.
This is a Phase 1/2, open label study. Phase 1 consists of 2 parts. Part 1 is a dose-escalation assessment of the safety and tolerability of epacadostat administered with nivolumab in subjects with select advanced solid tumors and lymphomas. Part 2 will evaluate the safety and tolerability of epacadostat in combination with nivolumab and chemotherapy in subjects with squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck (SCCHN) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Phase 2 will include expansion cohorts in 7 tumor types, including melanoma, NSCLC, SCCHN, colorectal cancer, ovarian cancer, glioblastoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).
Open-label, dose-escalation study in subjects with previously treated B-cell malignancies to find maximum tolerated dose (MTD) or pharmacologic active dose of a PI3Kδ inhibitor, parsaclisib, as monotherapy and in combination with: itacitinib (INCB039110), a JAK1 inhibitor; rituximab; and rituximab, ifosfamide, carboplatin, and etoposide. Parsaclisib inhibits PI3Kδ, a protein involved in growth and survival of B-cell cancer cells.
The study will be conducted in three parts. Part 1 is a dose escalation phase to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of INCB040093, a PI3Kδ inhibitor, or a tolerated, pharmacologically active dose; Part 2 will evaluate the combination of INCB040093 and itacitinib (INCB039110), a JAK1 inhibitor, to determine the MTD of the combination or a tolerated dose that produces substantial pharmacologic inhibition of both targets; Part 3 will further evaluate the chosen doses of INCB040093 alone and in combination with itacitinib (INCB039110) in subjects with relapsed/refractory B-cell malignancies.