View clinical trials related to Hematologic Malignancy.
Filter by:This is a multi-center, open-label, dose-escalation and cohort-expansion phase I clinical study to evaluate the safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics profile, efficacy and immunogenicity of IMM01 in subjects with refractory or recurrent hematologic malignancy.
This prospective, multicenter, randomized, open-label, Phase 2, parallel, dose ranging, multidose trial will enroll patients into 3 Thrombosomes dose groups and 1 control liquid stored platelets (LSP) group in order to evaluate, in a dose-escalation manner, the safety, and impact on bleeding, and the preliminary effect on coagulation measures of increasing doses of allogeneic Thrombosomes in comparison to standard of care, LSP.
This study is evaluating the safety and efficacy of using radiotherapy in participants who have refractory lymphoma shortly after receiving CAR T cell therapy (axicel or tisacel).
The primary objective of this study is to obtain de-identified, clinically characterized, whole blood specimens to evaluate biomarkers associated with cancer for diagnostic assay development.
This research study is studying the removal of a subset of white blood cells (called alpha/beta T cells) from the donor product using a cell separation device before the product is transplanted into the participant. The device used to remove the α/βT cells in this study is: -CliniMACS® TCR α/β Reagent System
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of entospletinib (ENTO) monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy in Japanese participants.
Outcome evaluation in patients who underwent transplantation with T-repleted bone marrow after post-transplantation cyclophosphamide
This is a pilot sub-study of patients receiving myeloablative transplant using total body irradiation (TBI) or total marrow irradiation (TMI) in their preparative regimen. The objective of this stub-study is to estimate the heterogeneity in cellular proliferation (FLT-PET uptake) as well the heterogeneity in marrow composition distribution (measured using whole body water-fat MRI) using positron emission tomography imaging. This will be used to design future trials as well as to determine the feasibility of PET and MRI imaging.
The purpose of this study is to: - Determine how well people tolerate sodium bicarbonate taken by mouth in higher doses than those usually given for heartburn. - Determine if sodium bicarbonate can reduce cancer-related pain.
This phase II clinical trial studies how well two donors stem cell transplant work in treating patients with high-risk hematologic malignancies. After receiving radiation to help further treat the disease, patients receive a dose of donors' T cells. T cells can fight infection and react against cancer cells. Two days after donors' T cells are given, patients receive cyclophosphamide (CY) to help destroy the most active T cells that may cause tissue damage (called graft versus host disease or GVHD). Some of the less reactive T cells are not destroyed by CY and they remain in the patient to help fight infection. A few days after the CY is given, patients receive donors' stem cells to help their blood counts recover. Using two donors' stem cell transplant instead of one donor may be more effective in treating patients with high-risk disease and may prevent the disease from coming back.