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Active clinical trials for "Hematologic Neoplasms"

Results 271-280 of 1132

Response to Influenza Vaccination in Pediatric Oncology Patients

Hematologic MalignancyPediatric Cancer1 more

Influenza infection occurring during oncologic treatment or following hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is associated with increased risk of morbidity in the form of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) and mortality relative to otherwise healthy patients. The study participants have been diagnosed with a hematological malignancy and are eligible to receive the current seasonal influenza (Flu) vaccine. Primary Objective To determine the feasibility of opening a longitudinal prospective study of IIV immunogenicity in pediatric leukemia patients. To describe the immunogenicity, as measured by the development of cell- and/or antibody-mediated influenza specific responses 3 to 5 weeks following vaccination, in a cohort of pediatric leukemia patients. Secondary Objectives To describe whether an immune response, as measured by development of cell- and/or antibody-mediated influenza specific responses, is detectable 1-2 weeks following vaccination in a cohort of pediatric leukemia patients. To describe the durability of immunogenicity by measuring cell - and antibody- mediated influenza specific responses at 6 months and 1 year following vaccination in a cohort of pediatric leukemia patients. Exploratory Objectives To estimate the clinical effectiveness of influenza vaccine in this cohort by monitoring for the development of clinical diagnosis of influenza in the cohort of enrolled pediatric oncology patients. To correlate results of immune cell frequency in blood, as measured by complete blood count with differential, with development of an immune response to IIV.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Impact of Chemotherapeutic Treatments in Patients Aged 75 Years and Over Treated for Lymphoid Hematological...

NeoplasmPlasma Cell1 more

The aim of the study is to assess the prevalence of functional decline in elderly patients treated with chemotherapy or immunochemotherapy for lymphoid hematologic malignancies. For this purpose, each patient benefits at inclusion (D0) of a standardized gerontological evaluation, and 3 and 6 months post-inclusion.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Screening Protocol for Tumor Antigen Expression Profiling and HLA Typing for Eligibility Determination...

Solid and Hematological Malignancies

This screening study is intended for men and women ≥ 18 to ≤ 75 years of age who have advanced solid or hematologic malignancy. The study will assess a subject's human leukocyte antigen (HLA) subtype and tumor antigen expression profile. Based on the results, it will be determined if a subject is eligible to be considered for Adaptimmune sponsored clinical trials testing the safety and efficacy of genetically changed T cells targeting specific tumor antigens. No treatment intervention will occur as part of this screening study. Upon enrollment, subjects will be required to provide a blood sample for HLA subtype analysis. If the results of the analysis match the HLA-A subtypes noted in the inclusion criteria and do not express the HLA subtypes that are exclusionary for the available interventional clinical trial(s), then the subject will be required to provide either an archival tumor specimen or fresh tumor tissue biopsy. The tumor specimen will be screened at a central laboratory for the expression (protein or gene) of multiple antigens which may include, but are not limited to MAGE-A4. Based upon the results of these diagnostic analyses, if eligible, subjects will be referred to an appropriate available interventional clinical trial(s) at the discretion of the Investigator. Following screening, tumor samples will be retained by Adaptimmune for the purpose of developing and validating in vitro diagnostic (IVD) assay(s) for antigen expression profiling which is required for regulatory approval of a new therapeutic product indication.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Long Term Follow Up Of Patients Who Have Received Gene Therapy Or Gene Marked Products

Severe Combined ImmunodeficiencyMalignancy4 more

This protocol (GENEFU) provides a mechanism for the 15-year followup period that the FDA requires for all participants in gene transfer protocols and assures that adequate followup can be maintained for a wide variety of participants on different individual gene therapy protocols at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. GENEFU serves as an umbrella protocol for long-term follow-up (LTFU) for recipients of gene therapy/gene marked (GT/GM) products at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The FDA has recommended methods to assess the risk of delayed adverse events after GT/GM and has provided specific requirements regarding the duration and design of LTFU observations. This protocol is intended to provide LTFU in accordance with the FDA guidelines for those who received a GT/GM product as part of a St. Jude-sponsored clinical trial or compassionate use treatment plan. The protocol calls for a physical examination or general health evaluation and collection of required blood samples annually for up to 15 years after the last receipt of a GT/GM product. Goals will be to obtain clinical histories in order to detect late clinical outcomes suggestive of retroviral or lentiviral disease, including but not limited to cancer/second malignancies, neurologic disorders, autoimmune disorders, and hematologic disorders. Blood samples will be archived and tested when clinically or scientifically indicated, as in the event of development of a second malignancy. This prospective cohort study will utilize descriptive statistics in the analysis of long-term late effects outcomes. It offers a uniform approach to long-term safety monitoring in research participants who have received a gene-transduced product as part of St. Jude-sponsored GT or GM protocols and compassionate use treatment plans.

Recruiting1 enrollment criteria

HEM-iSMART-A: Decitabine / Venetoclax and Navitoclax in Pediatric Patients With Relapsed or Refractory...

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemiain Relapse4 more

HEM-iSMART is a master protocol which investigates multiple investigational medicinal products in children, adolescents and young adults (AYA) with relapsed/refractory (R/R) ALL and LBL. Sub-protocol A is a phase I/II trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of Decitabine / Venetoclax and Navitoclax in children and AYA with R/R pediatric ALL/LBL

Not yet recruiting38 enrollment criteria

Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics Study of TQB3702 Tablets in Hematologic Tumor Subjects

Hematologic Malignancy

This project is an open, dose escalation and expansion phase I clinical study. The first phase is a dose escalation study, and the second phase is a dose expansion study based on the Maximum tolerated dose (MTD) / Recommended Phase II Dose (RP2D) obtained in the first phase. The purpose is to evaluate the tolerability and preliminary efficacy of TQB3702 tablets in hematological tumor subjects.

Not yet recruiting22 enrollment criteria

Umbilical Cord Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Treatment-induced Myelosuppression in Hematologic...

Hematologic NeoplasmsNeutropenia4 more

The purpose of the study is to explore the safety and efficacy of umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cells in treatment-induced myelosuppression in patients with hematologic malignancies.

Not yet recruiting43 enrollment criteria

Clinical Impact of Thoracic Scanographic Characteristics of Hematologic Malignancy Patients

Mediastinal Diseases

The mediastinum can be the site of benign or malignant tumors, including 10 to 20% of hematological malignancies. Mediastinal mass syndrome (MMS) includes symptoms due to irritation, invasion or compression of the organs of the mediastinum. This syndrome includes respiratory manifestations that may be secondary to compression of the tracheobronchial tree, venous vascular manifestations with the superior vena cava syndrome or arterial manifestations, cardiac manifestations, digestive or nervous manifestations. The management of a mediastinal syndrome is a diagnostic and therapeutic emergency requiring the collaboration of several disciplines in order to achieve the most effective but least deleterious way possible to diagnostic imaging, etiological biopsy, and the possible implementation of life-saving symptomatic measures before the initiation of etiological treatment. Diagnostic thoracic imaging relies primarily on thoracic computed tomography (CT) to determine the size and nature of the mediastinal mass, the presence and extent of tracheobronchial or great vessel compression, the presence of pleural and/or pericardial effusion, pulmonary embolism, parenchymal lesions, and possibly subdiaphragmatic lesions. However, the potential severity of MMS is often under-diagnosed in adult patients, particularly in the context of hematologic malignancy. Indeed, we have very little literature on the initial management of these patients at risk. The present study propose to conduct the first multicenter study to analyze the characteristics (clinical, scanographic, echocardiographic, hematological and resuscitation) of the initial management of patients with symptomatic MMS at diagnosis or at relapse of a patient with MH admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

The Endothelial Cell Dysfunction and Outcome Project for Hematological Neoplasms

Hematological NeoplasmEndothelial Dysfunction

The endothelium is a semipermeable monolayer of endothelial cells (EC) organized as a complex biological interface that separates all tissues from circulating blood. Any anti-neoplastic or immune therapy will directly challenge the endothelial layer, with a substantial risk of damaging EC or exacerbating pre-existing endothelial cell dysfunction. In our previous researchs the concepts of "endothelial vulnerability" and "endothelial cell dysfunction" for initial diagnosis of patients with hematological disorders, e.g. myelodysplastic syndromes as well as COVID-19 patients were designed. The novel and pre-existing endothelial vulnerability markers and markers of endothelial cell dysfunction or damage such as endothelial activation and stress index (EASIX) were also defined, validated and their prognostic role for treatment-related mortality and for a variety of allo- and CART-specific endothelial complications were established. However, the exact relationship of EASIX and other markers with endothelial cell biology are not known and require further clarification. Primary aims are to demonstrate that EASIX represents a systemic response of the organism to local or systemic loss of endothelial glycocalyx as visualized by sublingual microscopy and to establish EASIX, biomarkers and in vivo microscopy of sublingual and (in perspective) recto-sigmoidal capillary beds as prognostic markers of response to anti-neoplastic therapy, treatment-related toxicity and mortality (TRM) and overall survival (OS). Secondary objectives include the creation of a comprehensive database with information on endothelial, clinical, pathological and molecular characteristics of patients with hematological malignancies as well as the establishment of a repository of biospecimens for endothelial marker analyses from patients with hematological malignancies. We hypothesize that reduced endothelial glycocalyx thickness will permit direct interactions of leukocytes and platelets with endothelial cells, resulting in cellular activation (increased LDH), loss of platelets due to activation and microembolism, and ensuing kidney damage. As a first prospective analysis, we will answer the question if EASIX and serum endothelial biomarkers correlate with sublingual glycocalyx thickness, and if these parameters combine to predict outcome after anti-neoplastic therapy including alloSCT and CART.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Long-term Follow-up After Adoptive Transfer of Genetically Modified Cell Products

Relapsed Hematologic MalignancyRefractory Hematologic Malignancy

Human gene therapy products are designed to achieve therapeutic effect through genetic modifications of human cells using retroviral or lentiviral vectors, resulting in permanent or long-acting changes in the human body. With this genetic modification comes risk of undesirable adverse events. Due to this risk, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Center for Biologics Evaluation and research (CBER) require long-term follow-up (15 years) of participants that receive investigational gene therapy products that meet defined criteria. This protocol will provide a mechanism by which to appropriately monitor participants that have received a genetically modified cellular product on a St. Jude initiated study.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria
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