View clinical trials related to Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia.
Filter by:This is a phase 1/1b, interventional single arm, open label, treatment study designed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of infusion of autologous T cells engineered to contain an anti-cluster of differentiation 19 (CD19) and anti-cluster of differentiation 20 (CD20) single chain variable fragment (scFv) coupled to cluster of differentiation CD3ζ (CD3ζ) and co-stimulatory domain 4-1BB (4-1BB) signaling domains in patients with relapsed and/or refractory CD19 or CD20 positive B cell malignancies
The primary objective of this study is to determine the preliminary efficacy of the combination of tirabrutinib (formerly GS-4059) and entospletinib with obinutuzumab in adults with relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
The primary objective of this study is to determine the preliminary efficacy of the combination of tirabrutinib and idelalisib with obinutuzumab in adults with relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The study has a 6 participant per arm safety run-in to evaluate safety prior to the enrollment of subsequent participants. The treatment period is adaptive, with a duration of active treatment up to two years and a total follow-up on study for up to 30 days post end of treatment, or up to Week 25 should a participant discontinue treatment prior to Week 25 for reasons other than disease progression.
The aim of this study is to evaluate if standard chemoimmunotherapy (FCR, BR) in frontline treatment of physically fit CLL patients without del17p or TP 53 mutation can be replaced by combinations of targeted drugs (Venetoclax, Ibrutinib) with anti-CD20-antibodies (Rituximab, Obinutuzumab), which may induce extremely long lasting remissions.
This multicenter, single arm, non-interventional, observational study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of obinutuzumab in daily clinical practice in participants with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The study will also assess cost of disease management. The total length of the study is 42 months.
This is a multicenter, 2-cohort Phase 2 study assessing both minimal residual disease (MRD)-guided discontinuation and fixed duration therapy with the combination of ibrutinib + venetoclax in subjects with treatment-naïve CLL or SLL.
This study will evaluate the safety, antitumor activity and preliminary pharmacokinetics of an investigational drug product, DTRMWXHS-12, in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia or other B-cell lymphomas. DTRMWXHS-12 will be evaluated as a single agent, and in combination. This study will be conducted in two parts: phase Ia and Ib. Both parts will explore escalating doses of DTRMWXHS-12. The phase Ia study will evaluate DTRMWXHS-12 monotherapy. The phase Ib study will evaluate DTRMWXHS-12 combinations.
The Primary Objective is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of multiple dose oral administration of DTRMWXHS-12 capsule in patients with B-cell lymphoma. The Secondary Objective is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of multiple dose oral administration of DTRMWXHS-12 capsule in patients with B-cell lymphoma.
The purpose of this study is to find the number of natural killer (NK) cells from non-HLA matched donors that can be safely infused into patients with cancer. NK cells are a form of lymphocytes that defend against cancer cells. NK cells in cancer patients do not work well to fight cancer. In this study, the NK cells are being donated by healthy individuals without cancer who are not "matched" by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes to patients. After receiving these NK cells, patients may also be given a drug called ALT803. ALT803 is a protein that keeps NK cells alive, helps them grow in number and supports their cancer-fighting characteristics. HLA-unmatched NK cell infusion is investigational (experimental) because the process has not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
This is a prospective, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind phase III study that compares the efficacy and safety of oral ibrutinib in previously untreated Binet stage A CLL patients without treatment indication according to iwCLL guidelines but risk of early disease progression. For event-free survival (EFS), an improvement from 24 months for untreated intermediate or (very) high risk CLL to 48 months for subjects treated with ibrutinib is considered clinically relevant. Ibrutinib / placebo is administered continuously orally until symptomatic disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or voluntary treatment withdrawal, whichever occurs first.