View clinical trials related to Neutropenia.
Filter by:The aim of the study is to identify clinical and laboratory parameters, present at the time of initial evaluation that could help predict which children with cancer, fever, and neutropenia will be at risk for developing clinically documented infections and/ or complications.
This study was designed to review clincal outcomes of Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) treated with R-CHOP chemotherapy in the era of pegylated-filgrastim. The investigators will prospectively collect clinical data and treatment outcome of patients with DLBCL who use prophylactic pegylated-filgrastim.
Prospective, observational cohort study of peripheral T cell lymphoma. Purpose is to investigate the complication including febrile neutropenia in the era of pegylated G-CSF prophylaxis.
This is a study to collect the outcomes of stem cell transplantation for patients with hematologic diseases other than cancer.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multi-center phaseⅢstudy to evaluate efficacy and safety of oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy plus MB-6(320 mg/capsule, 6 capsules tid) in patients with stage 3 colorectal cancer who underwent surgical excision of their primary tumor.
This study will assess the Efficacy and Safety of different doses of PEG-rhG-CSF and a single-dose of G-CSF in Preventing Chemotherapy-induced Neutropenia.
Septic shock remains a significant clinical problem associated with high rates of mortality among neutropenic patient despite antimicrobial therapy and supportive care. Recently, mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) have demonstrated remarkable potential effect in sepsis. MSC treatment significantly reduced mortality in septic mice receiving appropriate antimicrobial therapy. MSCs reduced systemic inflammatory cytokine levels in mice, down-regulated of inflammation and inflammation-related genes (such as interleukin-10, interleukin-6). Bacterial clearance was greater in MSC-treated mice. Thus, MSCs have beneficial effects on experimental sepsis and suggest that MSСs-therapy may be an effective adjunctive treatment to reduce sepsis-related mortality. The safety of MSCs is proved by Graft-versus-host disease treatment MSCs in patients after bone marrow transplantation. This study hypothesis is that MSCs reduce organ dysfunction/injury, systemic inflammation and mortality in patients with septic shock and severe neutropenia. The main goal of the study is to evaluate the impact of MSCs therapy on organ dysfunction/injury, systemic inflammation and 28-day mortality in patients with septic shock and severe neutropenia. All patients will be randomized in two groups: control group (standard treatment of septic shock) and MSCs-group (standard treatment of septic shock + MSCs infusion of 1-2 millions/kg/ day).
The Cologne Cohort of Neutropenic Patients (CoCoNut) is a non-interventional cohort study assessing risk factors, interventions, and outcome of immunosuppressed patients with or without opportunistic infections.
Objectives: 1. To assess the percentage of febrile neutropenia and suspected fungal-related febrile episodes in patients receiving chemotherapy 2. To explore the percentage/distribution of infectious origins of febrile neutropenia 3. To explore the percentage/distribution of infectious pathogens of febrile neutropenia 4. To explore clinical outcomes of different infectious origins/pathogens in febrile neutropenia episodes 5. To have a clear view of therapeutic actions in the management of hematological patients with febrile neutropenia and suspected fungal-related febrile episodes
To develop a robust prediction model to predict the occurrence of grade 3-4 neutropenia induced by adjuvant paclitaxel/carboplatin chemotherapy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer and to validate this model.