View clinical trials related to Multiple Myeloma.
Filter by:This is a single-center, single-arm, open-label phase I clinical study to determine the safety and efficacy of relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma subjects
This study aims to study the efficacy and safety of oral cyclophosphamide in addition to carfilzomib and dexamethadone for RRMM patients who have been previously exposed to lenalidomide combination therapies.
This is a prospective, descriptive study designed to assess the feasibility of administering CAR T therapy among patients with moderate to severe renal impairment using dose adjusted lymphodepleting chemotherapy.
This is a research study to find out if a drug called belantamab mafodotin in combination with dexamethasone, a steroid, can be safely and effectively given in the community setting. Belantamab mafodotin (BLENREP) was approved in the US in August 2020 under an FDA program called accelerated approval. In November 2022, belantamab mafodotin was removed from the market because a study to further confirm its activity in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma did not deliver a supporting result. However, this confirmatory study demonstrated that some patients may still benefit from treatment with belantamab mafodotin, and that this benefit can be long lasting. Belantamab mafodotin is often given at large academic medical centers every 3 weeks. This study will assess whether it is possible to administer belantamab in the community setting every 6 weeks. It is unknown if administering belantamab every 6 weeks versus every 3 weeks will result in improved safety and/or reduced efficacy.
Historically, participation in clinical trials has been highly skewed towards specific demographic groups. However, research identifying which trial attributes impact participation, in either positive or negative ways, is limited. This study invites participants to record a wide range of data on their clinical trial experience, with the goal being to identify factors which persistently limit patients' ability to participate in, or complete, a trial in which they were initially interested. Data will be analyzed through a range of demographic lenses, in hopes of discovering patterns which might improve the experience of future multiple myeloma patients.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate post-transplant immune reconstitution and lymphocyte recovery as well as the 3-year progression-free survival of patients with multiple myeloma in two treatment arms. One arm will receive lenalidomide and an intensified regimen of maintenance VitD, and the other arm will receive lenalidomide and a therapeutic regimen of VitD. This clinical trial will also evaluate the overall response rate and survival for both treatment arms.
In the upcoming years, more and more ophthalmologists will be confronted with patients receiving Belantamab mafodotin (Belamaf) treatment due to the promising effects on survival in multiple myeloma patients. Early, at best subclinical detection of corneal damage may contribute to the definition of the optimal dosing regimen as well as therapy interval in each patient without the need to stop this lifesaving treatment. However, until today, studies focusing on the development, morphology, and evolution of corneal epithelial changes associated with Belamaf treatment are scarce. In order to clarify the precise pathomechanism of the associated keratopathy, innovative imaging techniques such as corneal confocal microscopy (CCM) need to be used to follow patients prior to therapy and on a regular basis during treatment intervals. In specific, different regions of the cornea, including the central apex, the (mid-) periphery and the limbus need to be explored. The latter, in specific, is often claimed to play an important role in the uptake of Belamaf into the cornea, but has not been studied in any approach so far. Likewise, there are no reports on the effects of Belamaf on corneal layers adjacent to the corneal epithelium, in specific the subepithelial nerve plexus (SNP). Changes in this layer may suggest a potential peripheral neurotoxic/neurodegenerative effect, associated with Belamaf. Furthermore, there is a lack of evidence from literature on how changes in the anterior layers of the cornea as studied with confocal microscopy in patients on Belamaf treatment differ from distinct corneal changes in these same layers in patients with other anterior corneal diseases including keratokonjunctivits sicca, epithelium basement membrane dystrophy and limbal stem cell disease. At last, regeneration of the corneal surface after Belamaf discontinuation has been described and is expected, but detailed information on the time to corneal rehabilitation as well as confocal microscopic follow-up of epithelial and neuronal layers during this time is warranted. The purpose of this monocentric, prospective longitudinal study is to answer these specific research questions in a combined clinical approach using corneal confocal microscopy.
It is a dose expansion, open-label, phase Ib study to evaluate the safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetic (PK), pharmacodynamic (PD), and immunogenicity of CT103A in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.
This is a phase 1/2, open label, single-center study designed to assess the safety and preliminary clinical activity of different belantamab mafodotin doses in combination with daratumumab, pomalidomide, and dexamethasone (DPd) in patients with Relapsed/ Refractory Multiple Myeloma (RRMM) previously treated with one line of therapy who are lenalidomide refractory. This will be a 2-Part study. Part 1 will evaluate the safety of belantamab mafodotin in combination with DPd in 2 cohorts and determine the Recommended Phase 2 Dose (RP2D). In the dose expansion phase (Part 2) an expansion cohort will be treated with the RP2D. The expansion cohort will randomize participants (1:1) in two groups to evaluate two alternate dose modification guidelines for corneal AEs. Part 2 will further evaluate the safety and assess the preliminary clinical activity of the belantamab mafodotin RP2D in combination with DPd. Overall, approximately 48 participants will be enrolled in the study. Participant follow-up will continue up to 3 years after the last participant is randomized. The estimated accrual period will be 12 months corresponding to an approximate total study duration of 4 years.
The primary hypothesis of this study is that teclistamab SC in combination with daratumumab SC or lenalidomide will be safe and induce a high rate of VGPR or better in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients This is an open-label, multicenter, non-comparative, 2-cohort, 2-stage with interruption of enrollment for an efficacy and safety interim analysis, interventional Phase 2 study evaluating the efficacy and safety of a combination with Tec-Dara (Cohort A) or Tec-Len (Cohort B) in patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who are not eligible for SCT.