View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, T-Cell.
Filter by:The main objective of this clinical trial is to study the efficacy and safety of cobomarsen (also known as MRG-106) for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL), mycosis fungoides (MF) subtype. Cobomarsen is designed to inhibit the activity of a molecule called miR-155 that may be important to the growth and survival of MF cancer cells. The study will compare the effects of cobomarsen to vorinostat, a drug that has been approved for the treatment of CTCL in the United States and several other countries. Participants in the clinical trial will be randomly assigned to receive either weekly doses of cobomarsen by injection into a vein or daily oral doses of vorinostat. Participants will continue on their assigned treatment as long as there is no evidence of progression of their cancer. The effects of treatment will be measured based on changes in skin lesion severity, as well as the length of time that the subject's disease remains stable or improved, without evidence of disease progression. The safety and tolerability of cobomarsen will be assessed based on the frequency and severity of observed side effects. Participants assigned to receive vorinostat who experience progression of their disease during their participation in this study may have the option to be treated with cobomarsen in an open-label, crossover arm of the same study if they meet the entry criteria for that part of the study.
This study is a multicentric, open-label, randomized phase 3 trial. The study will be conducted in select countries in Europe and South Korea sponsored by LYSARC and in Japan sponsored by Celgene. There will be a combined enrollment target of 86 randomized patients, with approximately 14 randomized patients from Japan. The enrollment to the randomized study will start at European sites in parallel to a safety run-in part in Japan. A safety run-in will be conducted to confirm the tolerability of oral azacitidine at doses of 100 mg and 200 mg QD in Asian patients. Once oral azacitidine at 200 mg QD is confirmed as tolerable, Asian patients from Japan and South Korea will start to be randomized into the main study. Additional patients (non-randomized) are anticipated to enroll to the safety run-in.
This is an open-label, single-center, nonrandomized, Phase 2 study to evaluate efficacy and safety of SHR-1210 combined with Apatinib in subjects with relapsed or refractory NK/T cell lymphoma.Efficacy will be assessed every 8 weeks according to 2014 Lugano criteria.Safety evaluations (both clinical and laboratory) are performed at baseline, before each study treatment, and throughout the study.
Results of conventional therapy in patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma(PTCL) are poor. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation(allo-HSCT) gave excellent results in PTCL after failure of conventional therapy and in many cases also of HDT/ASCT. A disadvantage of allo-HSCT is high TRM rate, especially in refractory or relapsed patients. Another limitation to the use of allo-HSCT is the availability of a HLA matched donors. Haploidentical family donors have been successfully used in treatments of hematologic malignancies, including malignant lymphomas. Thus, allo-HSCT could be used as first-line consolidation following conventional chemotherapy in high-risk PTCL patients. The study hypothesis: Using allo-HSCT as consolidation following chemotherapy in high-risk PTCL exerts a strong anti-lymphoma effect and could increase response rate and improve long term survival.
The study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of VT-EBV-N (EBV-CTL) administration in ENKL patients after complete remission (CR). This is to prove the effect of VT-EBV-N (EBV-CTL) in prevention of ENKL relapse compared to placebo, by checking the primary endpoint of DFS rate (disease free survival, no relapse or death after randomization) at 2 years (103 weeks) for the last subject enrolled. 50% of the subjects will be administered VT-EBV-N (EBV-CTL), while the remaining subjects will be administered a placebo.
Registry of patients with Primary Cutaneous Lymphoma seen at participating centers in Spain. The registry will identify patients with this disease and includes information about stage, diagnostic and therapeutic interventions and willingness to participate in further studies.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Apatinib Combined With CHOP Regimen(cyclophosphamide, vincristine, epirubicin, prednisone in the treatment of newly diagnosed peripheral T-cell lymphoma.
Extranodal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type (NKTCL) is a highly aggressive peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL). Patients with newly diagnosed stage IV and relapsed/refractory have poor prognosis. 5-year progression-free survival was reported only 55%. Chidamide is a selective histone deacetylase inhibitor which was approved by FDA in treating relapsed or refractory PTCL. In phase I and II studies of chidamide, patients with relapsed or refractory NKTCL achieved a higher overall remission. Patients who obtained complete or partial remission had much favourable duration of remission. Thus, the invesgator design this study to evaluate the role of maintenance treatment of chidamide for induction chemotherapy-responded newly-diagnosed advanced and relapsed/refractory NKTCL patients.
NK malignancies consist of two different clinical entities, extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma and aggressive NK leukaemia. Queen Mary Hospital (QMH) had started to use PIGLETS chemotherapy for treatment of NK malignancies since 2013, with promising results. The study in QMH had ended because of successful recruitment in the planned number of subjects. When PIGLETS was used in extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma, patients with stage I/II lymphoma have an overall response rate of nearly 90%, while patients with stage III/IV disease have an overall response rate of around 60%. The figures are comparable to the SMILE chemotherapy previously used. However, PIGLETS regimen carries much lower risk of nephrotoxicity when compared with SMILE. It has since become a standard protocol in management of NK malignancies in our institution. PIGLETS chemotherapy carries two major problems: 1. the name PIGLETS may appear offensive to some religious populations. (e.g. Muslim) 2. significant nausea/vomiting was seen in previous studies, and these could at least be partially alleviated with substance P antagonist aprepitant Thus the investigators decided to start a study, renaming the original PIGLETS regimen into SIMPLE chemotherapy, adding aprepitant as antiemetics and to recruit more patients for evaluation of clinical efficacy. The results of SIMPLE chemotherapy will be compared to SMILE in a non-inferiority trial setting.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of anlotinib in patients with stage IV extranodal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type.