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NCT07215832
KEAP is an expanded access program designed to provide selinexor to eligible participants outside of a clinical trial before the drug has been given marketing approval by the country's regulatory agency or the drug is commercially available in the country. Patients who do not qualify for an ongoing clinical trial but who might benefit from the investigational medicine may be eligible, provided they have exhausted all other available treatment options. Investigational medicines are provided to patients only through treating physicians who obtain the relevant approval on behalf of their patient from the relevant regulatory agency and follow all applicable safety-reporting regulations of the respective country.
NCT07397832
A Single-Arm, Open-Label, Multicenter Phase II Trial of CRP Regimen (Chidamide, Rituximab, Polatuzumab Vedotin) in Treating Elderly Patients with Previously Untreated Double-Positive Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma
NCT05583149
This research is being done to assess the effectiveness and safety of acalabrutinib combined with lisocabtagene maraleucel (liso-cel) for people with relapsed/refractory aggressive B-cell lymphoma. This research study involves the study drug acalabrutinib in combination with lisocabtagene maraleuce
NCT06043011
The purpose of the project is to set up a national, prospective, longitudinal, multicenter registry platform to document uniform data on characteristics, molecular diagnostics, treatment and course of disease, to collect patient-reported outcomes and to establish a decentralized biobank for patients with hematological malignancies in Germany.
NCT02570542
The purpose of this study is to study the impact of stem cell dose on outcome after autologous transplant.
NCT04488354
This study is designed as a long-term follow-up study of participants who have receive genetically modified autologous CLBR001 CAR-T cells
NCT02445248
This is a multi-center, phase II study to determine the efficacy and safety of CTL019 in adult patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL.
NCT02957019
Phase I/II, open-label, multicenter, prospective study.
NCT05532761
Immunotherapy became in recent years a major innovation in the care of cancer patients, with unprecedented improvement in complete response and survival, particularly in hematological cancers. Since 2018, patients with relapsed or refractory lymphoma can benefit from immunotherapy based on CAR-T cells (Chimeric Antigenic Receptor - T cells), drugs derived from gene therapy and products from the patient's own T cells. The efficacy of these drugs, their development in more and more indications and in continuous earlier lines of treatment, their unprecedented adverse effects and their very high cost justify the search for predictive factors of efficacy and tolerance in order to optimize their use and benefit the greatest number of eligible patients. A better understanding of quality of life and its determinants in patients who received CAR-T cells could play a major role in predicting efficacy and tolerance. Quality of life data have indeed been deemed insufficient in phase 1-2 trials which have demonstrated the benefit of CAR-T cells in patients with relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) in 3rd line of treatment or more and led to obtaining their marketing authorization. It is therefore necessary to assess the quality of life of patients treated in routine care with CAR-T cells. The European Qualitop project aims, from self-questionnaires, to explore the quality of life during the 2 years following the initiation of immunotherapy with a multidimensional approach integrating genetic factors, lifestyle habits and psychosocial determinants of patients. In this context, the Qualitop CAR-T study is a prospective non-comparative real-life study aimed at describing the multidimensional quality of life, its psychosocial determinants and drug consumption in patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL treated with CAR -T cells.
NCT05366257
A retrospective, non-interventional cohort study was used to address the study objectives. This study aimed to provide a better understanding of real-world healthcare resource utilization (HRU) and healthcare reimbursement costs associated with CAR-T therapy among patients with r/r Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL).
NCT02580552
Objectives of this clinical trial are to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and potential efficacy of the investigational drug, cobomarsen (MRG-106), in patients diagnosed with certain lymphomas and leukemias, including cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) \[mycosis fungoides (MF) subtype\], chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) \[activated B-cell (ABC) subtype\], and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). Cobomarsen is an inhibitor of a molecule called miR-155 that is found at high levels in these types of cancers and may be important in promoting the growth and survival of the cancer cells. Participants in the clinical trial will receive weekly doses of cobomarsen administered by injection under the skin or into a vein, or by injection directly into cancerous lesions in the skin (for CTCL only). Blood samples will be collected to measure how cobomarsen is processed by the body, and other measurements will be performed to study how normal and cancerous cells of the immune system respond when exposed to cobomarsen.
NCT00482053
The purpose of this study is to determine if double autologous then allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant may offer an improved treatment option for patients with relapsed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) who are not likely to be cured by the conventional transplantation regimen.
NCT02983097
The goal of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of the combination of lenalidomide, an immunomodulatory drug (IMiD) with a standard immunochemotherapy treatment, called R-DHAP. R-DHAP consists of a monoclonal antibody called Rituximab and chemotherapy consisting of Dexamethasone, high dose Cytarabine, often called Ara-C, and platinum based chemotherapy, either cisplatinum, or, if treatment with cisplatinum is contraindicated, carboplatinum.
NCT00400478
This is a randomized, open label, phase III study to evaluate the ability of rituximab maintenance therapy to prolong event-free survival in aggressive NHL. Patients will be screened after successful standard induction therapy (CR or Cru following standard R-CHOP-like therapy with 8 infusions of rituximab plus CHOP-like chemotherapy (4-8 cycles). Patients will be followed until an event occurs as defined in the protocol. To evaluate the clinical efficacy of rituximab maintenance therapy as compared to observation in patients with aggressive B-cell Non-Hodgkins lymphoma or follicular lymphoma grade 3b who have achieved a complete remission after appropriate first-line therapy, measured by event-free survival (EFS), 440 patients with DLCBL or follicular NHL grade 3 (220 per arm) will be recruited.
NCT01066429
Poor prognosis dufuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) represents 50% of all DLBCL with overall cure rates ranging from 50-60% with modern dose-dense immunochemotherapy regimens such as R-CHOP14. Using an alternative strategy, as infusional and dose-adjusted R-EPOCH, the investigators have shown an 83% of complete responses (CR), with an estimated 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 75% (García-Suárez et al. British Journal of Haematology 2007, 136:276). Despite this improvement in outcome, the search for new treatment strategies should continue. Therefore, compared with prior R-EPOCH the investigators decided to investigate whether the introduction of dexamethasone (40 mg IV on days 1-5) in place of prednisone (based upon data which demonstrated that the former was associated with enhanced Central Nervious System penetration) and the reduction of treatment intervals from 3 to 2 weeks would be feasible and might improve the outcome in this group of patients.