View clinical trials related to Hematological Malignancy.
Filter by:The trial is designed as an early exploratory single-centre, open, single-arm clinical trial. The trial is planned to evaluate the safety and efficacy of CAR-T for the treatment of relapsed refractory malignant haematological tumours. The trial is divided into five visit periods as follows: screening period, non-myeloablative pretreatment, short-term follow-up period, mid-term follow-up period and exit visit.
This is a multicenter, open-label, phase I clinical study of YY201 in the patients with relapsed/refractory lymphomas and relapsed/refractory large granular lymphocytic leukemia who failed or cannot tolerate standard treatment.
A pilot study using remote monitoring technology developed by Locus Health in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy treatment.
This phase 1 study is aimed at establishing the safety basis of OT-A201 in the treatment of hematological malignancies and solid tumors. In the dose of escalation part it is to characterize the overall safety and tolerability profile and determine the recommended dose(s) of OT-A201 as monotherapy, and in various combination regimens. Preliminary information about anti-cancer activity will be further explored in the expansion part of the study.
Cancer-related anemia (CRA) is one of the common accompanying diseases of malignant tumors. In 2019, a cross-sectional survey on the anemia status of 7324 malignant tumor patients in 97 hospitals in China found that the incidence of CRA was about 49.24%. 92.84% of the patients have not been given enough attention and effective treatment. According to the European Oncological Anemia Survey, CRA has the highest incidence in leukemia patients, followed by lymphoma/myeloma. CRA not only leads to a decline in the quality of life of patients, but also reduces the sensitivity to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and also causes hypoxia in tumor tissue, which affects the prognosis of patients as an independent factor. At present, the treatment of CRA mainly includes blood transfusion therapy, erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA) therapy, iron supplementation, etc. Conventional oral iron has low bioavailability and strong gastrointestinal irritation. Although intravenous iron can quickly replenish iron, excessive iron supplementation is prone to iron overload. Less acceptable. Shengxuening Tablets are derived from silkworm excrement. The main components of iron chlorophyllin and chlorophyll derivatives are very similar in structure to heme, and can be directly absorbed by small intestinal mucosal cells, effectively supplementing the iron elements required in the process of hematopoiesis. The investigators found that Shengxuening Tablets can increase the number of peripheral blood cells in mouse models of myelosuppression, improve bone marrow morphology, reverse the decrease in body weight and spleen index, and increase the levels of serum erythropoietin and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor . Real-time fluorescent quantitative PCR and Western blot analysis showed increased expression levels of stem cell factor (SCF), JAK2 and STAT3 in the liver. These results indicated that Shengxuening Tablets promoted the recovery of hematopoietic function in myelosuppressive models by increasing the secretion of hematopoietic factors and activating the JAK2/STAT3 pathway. Therefore, in order to further confirm the preventive effect, effectiveness and safety of Shengxuening Tablets in the treatment of anemia in patients with hematological tumors complicated with anemia, this clinical trial was designed.
This study is designed to collect long-term safety and survival data from participants previously treated in an eligible Century-sponsored index trial. This is an observational study, and the elements of the study design allow for important follow-up for safety, survival, and the continued evaluation of any late adverse events (AEs) that may appear after treatment with such cellular products. Additionally, collection of persistence data from participants will support the identification of any long-term risks or late AEs that may be causally related to treatment with such cellular products.
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.
Antibacterial prophylaxis is recommended in patients at high risk of infection, specifically patients undergoing acute leukemia induction therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) who are expected to have profound neutropenia (ANC<100 neutrophils/milliliter) for more than seven days. Xerava™ (eravacycline) has a broad spectrum of activity including many multi-drug resistant strains of bacteria. It is not an agent used for treatment of febrile neutropenia, making eravacycline a very attractive alternative to consider in this prophylactic setting. Eravacycline has activity against MRSA, VRE, and Clostridioides difficile, all of which are common problems in this patient population. It also covers the majority of enteric gram-negative pathogens while also producing satisfactory tissue penetration and adequate plasma concentrations, which has classically been a concern with prior agents. Eravacycline has activity against coagulase-negative staphylococcus, which is a common catheter-related infection in leukemia and HSCT patients. The primary objective will be report the incidence of breakthrough infections during eravacycline prophylaxis for hematologic malignancy patients with prolonged neutropenia.
This is a single-arm, multicenter, exploratory clinical study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the combination of etoposide, cytarabine and PEG-rhG-CSF (EAP regimen) on hematopoietic stem cell mobilization in poor mobilization patients with hematological malignancies. All eligible patients will receive EAP regimen treatment, then the number of CD34+ cells and white blood cells will be monitoring. When the collection standard is met, hematopoietic stem cell collection will be started.
This is a phase Ia/Ib, first-in-Human, open-Label, multicenter, dose escalation and dose expansion study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity, and preliminary efficacy of SG2501 in subjects with relapsed or refractory hematological malignancies and lymphoma.