View clinical trials related to Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia.
Filter by:This trial aims to demonstrate the feasibility of this approach to reliably generate product and to safely administer the product to patients who have B-Cell Lymphoma and B-Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of pirtobruitinib (LOXO-305) to ibrutinib in participants with CLL/SLL. Participants may or may not have already had treatment for their cancer. Participation could last up to six years.
The purpose of this study is to collect medical informations and samples from refractory and/or relapsed chronic lymphocytic leukemia during or after venetoclax treatment, in order to evaluate the frequency of resistance mechanisms.
This is a hypothesis-driven, observational, cross-sectional, multi-site study of the financial difficulties experienced by patients undergoing treatment for multiple myeloma (MM) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). It is composed of a patient survey (n=250) (Appendix A), a physician survey (n=100) (Appendix B), and a practice survey completed by each site enrolling patients onto this study (Appendix C). A subset of enrolled patients (n=35) will be invited to participate in an optional second telephone interview (Appendix D). This study will measure the prevalence of patient-reported financial difficulty, specific financial burdens and resources currently available to patients and from practices to assist with patient financial navigation.
This multicenter, prospective, open-label, randomized, superiority phase 3 study is designed to demonstrate that treatment with a triple combination of acalabrutinib, obinutuzumab and venetoclax (GAVe) prolong the progression-free survival (PFS) as compared to treatment with the combination of obinutuzumab and venetoclax (GVe) in pa-tients with high risk CLL (defined as having at least one of the follow-ing risk factors: 17p-deletion, TP53-mutation or complex karyotype).
This phase II trial tests whether the pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine series (PCV20 and PPSV23) works to mount an effective immune response in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. PCV20 and PPSV23 are both vaccines that protect against bacteria that cause pneumococcal disease. Giving these vaccinations as series may make a stronger immune response and prevent against pneumococcal infections in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
A Phase 1 first-in-human dose-escalation and dose-expansion study of BMF-219, an oral covalent menin inhibitor, in adult patients with AML, ALL (with KMT2A/ MLL1r, NPM1 mutations), DLBCL, MM, and CLL/SLL.
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of APG-2575 single agent in patients with relapsed/refractory CLL/SLL.
In this study the antibody response after vaccination with the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugated vaccine (PCV13) followed 2 months later by the 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23) in adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia will be investigated.
This is going to be a non-interventional study (NIS). Assessment of variables will be carried out using data on patient's treatment in real-life clinical setting. Patients should be enrolled into study after evaluation of eligibility criteria by the investigator. No additional procedures besides those already used in the routine clinical practice will be applied to the patients. Treatment assignment will be done according to the current practice. Evaluation of efficacy and safety of any approaches used for CLL/SLL treatment is not the primary objective of this study, though there is no treatment of interest. Study procedures will comply with all the local regulatory requirements regarding AE reporting (pharmacovigilance). It is planned to enroll approximately 6000 patients (suggested number of patients on WW~1000 pts, 1L~2750 pts, RR~2250 pts) During the course of study's prospective part, it is planned to carry out at approximately 5 visits: (if unscheduled visit performed - the information should be filled on nearest visit). - Baseline visit: ICF signing, initial patient's data input will be done retrospectively, for patients who are already monitored by investigational site. - Interim Visits (CRF will be filled every 6 months for therapy receiving patients and every 12 months for WW patients; if a patient transitions from WW to therapy, his/her CRF will be filled every 6 months; all patient's visits should be planned according routine practice and investigator's judgement on individual basis). - Final visit (data collection on 24 months after enrollment): patient's data input will be done for previously enrolled patients (data update).