View clinical trials related to Hematologic Neoplasms.
Filter by:DETERMINE is an open-label phase II/III trial. It will look at targeted treatments in rare cancers or common cancers with rare genetic change (mutation). Participants must have a cancer with an identified mutation. This could be found during routine testing or as part of another research programme. The DETERMINE trial will recruit adults, teenagers and children. If a drug is found to benefit a new patient group, the study team will work with the NHS and the Cancer Drugs Funds to see if these drugs can be available for patients in the future. This clinicaltrials.gov record refers to the Overall Trial Protocol (Master Screening Record), additional records will be added to clinicaltrials.gov for each treatment arm.
This is a single-arm, open-label, single-center, phase I study. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety of CD7 CAR-T therapy for patients with CD7-positive relapsed or refractory T-ALL/LBL, and to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of CD7 CAR-T in patients.
The purpose of this study is to assess whether a cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for fatigue intervention is acceptable, feasible, and effective at managing fatigue and improving quality of life for patients following hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT).
Human gene therapy products are designed to achieve therapeutic effect through genetic modifications of human cells using retroviral or lentiviral vectors, resulting in permanent or long-acting changes in the human body. With this genetic modification comes risk of undesirable adverse events. Due to this risk, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Center for Biologics Evaluation and research (CBER) require long-term follow-up (15 years) of participants that receive investigational gene therapy products that meet defined criteria. This protocol will provide a mechanism by which to appropriately monitor participants that have received a genetically modified cellular product on a St. Jude initiated study.
The goal of this research study is to determine whether a self-administered, psychosocial mobile application (CARE app) is effective at improving the quality of life and experience of caregivers of patients receiving hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT).
This will be the first in-depth study to evaluate pretreatment and 12 months post-treatment, neurocognitive and psychological outcomes of children with brain tumor and blood cancer in Pakistan. The investigators will also determine the socioeconomic burden of pediatric brain tumors in low middle-income region and the association of micro RNA and protein markers with neurocognitive outcomes in PBT and blood cancer children. A prospective cohort study with a follow-up of 12 months at the Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan and Jinnah postgraduate Medical Centre , Karachi, Pakistan will be conducted. After taking consent/ assent the investigators will recruit 80, 5-21 years old children with newly diagnosed brain tumors presenting with any stage, who have not undergone any treatment. Trained psychologist will assess the neurocognitive outcomes by the Slosson scale, Raven's progressive matrices and Wechsler Intelligence Scale for children (WISC V) and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV) tools. The Quality of life and depression of the children will be determined by PedQL and Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS) and hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADs) respectively . The financial burden of the disease on the family will be measured on a visual analog scale ranging from no burden (0) to very large burden (100) and the parents QoL and disrupted schedule, financial problems, lack of family support, health problems and the impact of caregiving on caregiver's self-esteem will be assessed by Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory PedQl (family module) and Caregiver Reaction Assessment (CRA) tools respectively. The serum micro RNA (mi-21, mi-10b and mi-210) and protein markers (GFAP, NSE and S100β) will be assessed by qRT-PCR and ELISA.
The goal of this clinical trial is to examine feasibility of a cognitive intervention program in blood cancer survivors. The main questions it aims to answer are: - is it feasible to combine a ketogenic diet supplementation and online cognitive training in an intervention program - will patients using the combined intervention program have improved cognitive functioning compared to those who don't use it - how long will the intervention programs effects last Participants randomized to the intervention arm will consume an exogenous ketogenic supplementation and use an online cognitive training program for 12 weeks, while waitlist arm functions as a control group and will receive the online cognitive training only after a wait period of 12 weeks. Researchers will compare the intervention and waitlist control groups to see if the intervention improves cognitive functioning.
This phase studies the engineered red blood cells with PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab(WTX212), the natural biological metabolic function of red blood cells can make the carried pembrolizumab directionally distributed in the spleen tissue and activitate T cells, suggesting that this product may solve the problem that PD-1 treatment failure.
Proseq Cancer is a precision medicine program based on in-house whole exome sequencing (WES) and RNA sequencing. The approved protocol allows for biobanking, registration of clinical and laboratory data, and sharing of genomic data with the purpose of research, while fulfilling the Danish General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requirements. Patients are recruited from the North Denmark Region. Treatment can be offered on site if a targeted drug of a nationally approved indication is suggested by the national tumor board (NTB). If not, the patient may be treated in an available clinical protocol. If no approved drug or relevant protocol is available or feasible, treatment with a targeted drug used outside a clinical protocol is pursued.
The mediastinum can be the site of benign or malignant tumors, including 10 to 20% of hematological malignancies. Mediastinal mass syndrome (MMS) includes symptoms due to irritation, invasion or compression of the organs of the mediastinum. This syndrome includes respiratory manifestations that may be secondary to compression of the tracheobronchial tree, venous vascular manifestations with the superior vena cava syndrome or arterial manifestations, cardiac manifestations, digestive or nervous manifestations. The management of a mediastinal syndrome is a diagnostic and therapeutic emergency requiring the collaboration of several disciplines in order to achieve the most effective but least deleterious way possible to diagnostic imaging, etiological biopsy, and the possible implementation of life-saving symptomatic measures before the initiation of etiological treatment. Diagnostic thoracic imaging relies primarily on thoracic computed tomography (CT) to determine the size and nature of the mediastinal mass, the presence and extent of tracheobronchial or great vessel compression, the presence of pleural and/or pericardial effusion, pulmonary embolism, parenchymal lesions, and possibly subdiaphragmatic lesions. However, the potential severity of MMS is often under-diagnosed in adult patients, particularly in the context of hematologic malignancy. Indeed, we have very little literature on the initial management of these patients at risk. The present study propose to conduct the first multicenter study to analyze the characteristics (clinical, scanographic, echocardiographic, hematological and resuscitation) of the initial management of patients with symptomatic MMS at diagnosis or at relapse of a patient with MH admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).