View clinical trials related to Hematologic Neoplasms.
Filter by:It is a single-center, open-labeled, single-arm, non-randomized investigator-initiated trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of anti-CD19 universal CAR-NK(UCAR-NK) cells therapy combined with HSCT for B cell hematologic malignancies.
The goal of this study is to determine whether a palliative care intervention (PEACE) can improve the quality of life and experiences of participants with Lymphoma, Leukemia, or Multiple Myeloma receiving adoptive cellular therapy (ACT). After completion of an open pilot, participants will be randomly assigned into one of two study intervention groups. The names of the study intervention groups involved in this study are: - Palliative care (PEACE) plus usual oncology care - Usual care (standard oncology care) Participation in this research study is expected to last for up to 2 years. It is expected that about 90 people will take part in this research study.
This is a single-centre, single-arm and open-label study to investigate the safety and efficacy of JD010 in adult patients with relapsed or refractory B cell hematologic malignancies. JD010 injection is a CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor modified natural killer cells (CAR-NK) derived from a healthy donor
The primary objectives of this study is to evaluate the tolerability and safety of KSD-101 in Patients with EBV-associated haematologic neoplasms, observe the dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) and and to explore the maximum tolerated dose (MTD).
The goal of this observational study is to compare the incidence of relapse in G-CSF/ATG based and PT-Cy based haploidentical transplantation] in [patients aged 18 to 55 years with a diagnosis of hematological malignancies who unmanipulated haplo-HSCT with myeloablative conditioning]. The main question it aims to answer are: Primary objective: To compare the incidence of relapse in G-CSF/ATG based and PT-Cy based haploidentical transplantation and illustrate the possible immune mechanism. Secondary objectives: To compare CMV infection, GVHD and survival outcomes, and to observe the dynamic immune reconstitution of G-CSF/ATG based or PT-Cy based model. Exploratory objectives: To compare the long-term quality of life among recipients who receive G-CSF/ATG based or PT-Cy based protocol.
An increasing number of cancer patients are eligible to receive immunotherapy. Efficacy and tolerance have been demonstrated in multicentre randomized clinical trials with positive results. However, real-life experience differs from clinical trial results, especially regarding the management of potential adverse events. HR-QoL (Health Related Quality of Life) is one of the components of QoL (Quality of Life) in its broad acceptation and is certainly the only one usually collected in trials while little is known about QoL in cancer patients treated in the 'real-world'. QUALITOP partners intend to bring together all relevant longitudinal information present in large heterogeneous data (big data) to estimate patient QoL and find surrogate markers of QoL and its evolution. Within the QUALITOP consortium, 5 countries will collect prospective clinical and QoL data and also retrospective clinical data, and share it. This project will enable collecting, managing, sharing, modelling, processing, and exploiting big data on QoL. Furthermore, beyond the description of QoL, analytical tools (including causal inference methods and machine learning) are needed to understand the determinants of QoL and their complex relationships with irAEs (immune related Adverse Events) in a big-data context where standard statistical techniques would be limited. Artificial intelligence and causal models may be applied and developed to empower the patient, prevent adverse medical conditions, and promote QoL. The created knowledge will enable proposing guidelines for promoting better QoL. QUALITOP aims at identifying the determinants of health status regarding immunotherapy-related adverse events (IR-AEs, such as toxicities) depending on the patient's profile in a real-world context. The richness of QUALITOP is in the diversity of the experts who will collaborate in it. Clinicians involved in the care (thus the health status of the patients) will collaborate with psychologists and sociologists to understand and integrate complementary dimensions of QoL related to immunotherapy. Experts in pharmacovigilance and pharmacists will investigate the IR-AEs and their associations with patient behaviour and non-drug consumption. Epidemiologists, data scientists (including bioinformaticians and biostatisticians) and economists will extract information from the data and develop simulation models to produce knowledge. The project will take place in close relation with patient associations that will interact with experts to design the analyses, interpret their results, and proceed to their dissemination. The main objective is to collect data of patients receiving immunotherapy in order to describe its impact in their quality of life. - Create the first real-life cohort of cancer patients treated with immunotherapy within a context of multidimensional management (with data on clinical information, health-related QoL (HR-QoL), IR-AEs, drug consumption, lifestyle, and administrative data). - Accelerate knowledge directed to different stakeholders (patients, relatives, clinicians, pharmacists, health authorities, and the general public) for a better understanding of the determinants of QoL and its optimization after immunotherapy through the development of innovative analytic tools (artificial intelligence and causal models). - Produce policies and recommendations to improve patients QoL and participate in the implementation of the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) for 4P medicine (Predictive, Preventive, Personalized, Participative) in immunotherapy for cancer patients.
Young adult cancer survivors (18-39y) are at increased risk of financial distress. This study seeks to better understand the financial challenges experienced by these individuals via quantitative serial assessments, study-based financial navigator encounters and an end of study qualitative interview.
To evaluate the tolerability and safety of CAR-T technology in patients with relapsed or refractory hematolymphoid malignancies.
Current treatment for patients with secondary antibody deficiency (SAD) is Immunoglobulin replacement therapy (IGRT). There are currently no clinical guidelines for IGRT discontinuation in patients with SAD. This study will examine the IGRT discontinuation success rate and IGRT discontinuation rate in patients.
This project is an open, dose escalation and expansion phase I clinical study. The first phase is a dose escalation study, and the second phase is a dose expansion study based on the Maximum tolerated dose (MTD) / Recommended Phase II Dose (RP2D) obtained in the first phase. The purpose is to evaluate the tolerability and preliminary efficacy of TQB3702 tablets in hematological tumor subjects.