View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, T-Cell.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to investigate efficacy and safety of Chidamide Combined With Cyclophosphamide,Prednisone,Thalidomide in Treatment of Fragile Patients With Relapse/Refratory Peripheral T Cell Lymphoma :a Phase II,Single-arm,Open-label, Muti-center Study
Relapsed and refractory T-cell lymphomas have been reported to have dismal outcomes. The role of allogeneic stem cell transplantation have been demonstrated in these patients. This clinical trial is studying the efficacy and safety of busulfan plus fludarabine as conditioning therapy followed by allogeneic stem cell transplantation (Allo-SCT) in T- and NK/T-cell lymphoma patients who have relapsed or are refractory to previous chemotherapies including autologous transplantation.
This document is a protocol for a non-interventional human research study in which the investigator hopes to better understand the changes that take place in T cells in Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). The purpose of this study is to establish a protocol for the collection and storage of tissue samples from patients with CTCL for future research studies. Collection and storage of tissue samples from control patients will also be carried out.
This is a single arm, prospective trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Chidamide in combination with previous chemotherapy in peripheral T cell lymphoma patients who did not achieve complete response after 3 cycles of chemotherapy in interim evaluation.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of CAR-pNK cell immunotherapy in patients with CD7 positive relapsed or refractory Leukemia and Lymphoma.
This study will include patients with mature T-cell lymphoma (MTCL) that has been treated with at least one type of chemotherapy, but is not responding or coming back after the previous treatment. This clinical trial uses a drug called Brentuximab Vedotin. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Brentuximab Vedotin for sale in the United States for certain diseases. Brentuximab is still being studied in clinical trials like this one to learn more about what its side effects are and whether or not it is effective in the disease or condition being studied. Brentuximab Vedotin is a type of drug called an antibody drug conjugate (ADC). ADCs usually have 2 parts; a part that targets cancer cells (the antibody) and a cell killing part (the chemotherapy). Antibodies are proteins that are part of your immune system. They can stick to and attack specific targets on cells. The antibody part of Brentuximab Vedotin sticks to a target called CD30. CD30 is an important molecule on some cancer cells (including non Hodgkin lymphoma) and some normal cells of the immune system. The cell killing part of Brentuximab Vedotin is a chemotherapy called monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE). It can kill cells that the antibody part of Brentuximab Vedotin sticks to. Brentuximab Vedotin has also been shown to kill cancer cells with levels of CD30 that cannot be seen by traditional methods. This study is being done to test if the study drug has an effect on Mature T cell Lymphoma with such low levels of a target called CD30 and how your disease respond to the study drug.
The first Part: recruiting untreated ENKL patients with extensive stage I or limited stage II disease (only referring to patients with the invasion of Waldeyer's ring and cervical lymph nodes) . Patients are randomly divided into two arms, IPGDP regimen chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy or radiotherapy followed by IPGDP regimen chemotherapy. IPGDP regimen for both arms are 3 cycles. And the chemotherapy is repeated every 3 weeks.. The second part: recruiting extensive stage II ,stage III-IV, relapsed or refractory ENKL patients. Patients receive 6 cycles of IPGDP regimen chemotherapy. And the chemotherapy is repeated every 3 weeks.
Open-labeled, multicenter phase II study of VIDL (VP-16, Ifosfamide, Dexamethasone, L-asparaginase) chemotherapy followed by high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation in patients with stage III/IV extranodal NK/T-cell Lymphoma.
Mycosis fungoides (MF) is an epidermotropic cutaneous T cell lymphoma characterized by the accumulation of CD4+ T-lymphocytes in the skin. Early MF presents as erythematous patches and/or infiltrated plaques. The diagnosis of early MF is a major diagnostic challenge and the differential diagnosis with inflammatory dermatoses is often very difficult. The histopathological diagnosis is also difficult and delayed. Therefore, it is important to develop biomarkers and/or a combination of biomarkers in order to improve the early diagnostic of MF. In a previous trial, investigators included 490 patients in a study aiming at identifying skin biomarkers of early MF. Several activating and inhibiting KIRs were found to be interesting for the skin diagnostic of MF, mainly KIR2DL4 and KIR3DL2. Investigators later evaluated blood biomarkers in patients with erythrodermic MF and Sezary Syndrome (SS). This French institutional study demonstrated that the identification by PCR of a combination of 4 blood markers (CD158k/KIR3DL2, PLS3/T-Plastin, Twist and NKp46) allowed a reliable diagnosis of lymphoma in erythrodermic patients. This previously published study interestingly showed that 30% to 50% of patients with early MF expressed at least one of these biomarkers in the blood (unpublished data). Other groups also recently showed that TOX can be a diagnostic tool for MF. The aim of this study is to establishing an accurate blood diagnosis for early suspected MF by demonstrating that newly identified biomarkers or their combination [5 cutaneous KIR receptor markers (KIR2DS1, KIR2DS3, KIR3DL1, KIR2DL4, KIR3DL2) and 5 blood biomarkers (TOX, Twist-1, PLS3/T-plastin, KIR3DL2, NKp46)] are differentially expressed by patients with MF and patients with inflammatory dermatoses closely resembling MF lesions. Statistical analysis will establish the best combination of blood biomarkers allowing the differentiation between the two groups of patients, combination that could represent a suitable diagnostic tool for early MF.
The aim of this study is to evaluate anti-tumor safety and efficacy of endostar®(Human recombinant endostatin injection)combined with traditional GDP (gemcitabine+dexamethasone+cis-platinum)chemotherapy for newly diagnosed or relapsed PTCL(aggressive peripheral T-cell lymphomas) patients in phase II clinical study.