View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, T-Cell.
Filter by:The goal of this study is to investigate the microbiome composition of the nares, non-lesional skin and patches, plaques and tumours in lesional skin of CTCL patients, including all stages of the disease, and to correlate microbiome (including S. aureus presence) and disease severity from CTCL patients.
This study is an open label, multicenter study. Subjects are randomized at a 1:1 ratio to receive either (arm A) azacitidine administered IH at day 1-5 and chidamide admistered twice a week for two weeks in combination with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone (CHOP) or (arm B) CHOP administered every 3 weeks for 6 cycles in patients with previously untreated peripheral T-cell lymphoma.
The designed study follows up on the previous one by the international T-cell project (Bellei et al,, 2012) and its purpose is to verify whether a prospective collection of data would permit access to more accurate information permitting a better definition of prognosis and investigation of more adequate treatment strategies for these neoplasms. The analysis of patients distributed in all five macro regions of the country and a comparison among them will provide a real picture of the disease in Brazil, limiting the bias probably found in the previous projects.
Radiation therapy, total skin electron therapy (TSET), achieves a high response rate and is an effective treatment for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma affecting the superficial region 1. One the most widely used TSET techniques consists of six dual fields initially developed at Stanford University 2. Dosimetrically, TSET at energies of about 3-7 MeV at the surface of a standing patient may result in significant dose variations due to variable skin distance, self shielding, irradiated fields overlapping and patient motion. Deviations occur from the prescription dose up to 40% and the surface dose inhomogeneity as much as 90% in body areas such as the perineum and eyelid, are revealed in the literature. To improve this condition, a selection of patients with advanced skin disease and regional extension could be cured by a combination of TSEB and photon beam irradiation. Helical tomotherapy (HT) has advantages in irradiating extended volumes with treatment length of up to 160 cm, continuously in a helical pattern without the need for field junction. Total marrow irradiation (TMI) via HT with low toxicities for bone marrow transplantation of Asia multiple myeloma patients could be feasible . A study of HT for total scalp irradiation has also shown that the employment of directional and complete blocking on the inner structures can effectively force the tangential delivery of the majority of beamlets to the PTV, which can limit the treatment depth. Using HT, an image-guided intensity-modulated radiotherapy, to replace conventional TSI technique to increase dose delivery and decrease toxicities could be a workable and feasible. Here, we applied TSI via HT (HITS) for a woman with T cell lymphoma failure by chemotherapy, topic UV irradiation and local radiotherapy (RT) in MMH to overcome the surface dose inhomogeneity by conventional RT. Additionally, we will compare the advantages and disadvantages between the plan of HT and conventional RT for TSI.