Safety and Efficacy of Venetoclax With Escalating Doses of Omacetaxine in Patients With Acute Myeloid...
Relapsed or Refractory Hematologic MalignanciesThis will be a single arm, open label Phase Ib dose-escalation study of the combination of VEN and OM, conducted using an innovative Bayesian Optimal Interval-design, to find the MTD in participants with AML failing treatment with venetoclax-containing regimens. Treatment plan will consist of an induction phase, followed by a consolidation phase if applicable.
Phase I/II Study to Reduce Post-transplantation Cyclophosphamide Dosing for Older or Unfit Patients...
Hematologic NeoplasmsBackground: Certain blood cancers can be treated with blood or bone marrow transplants. Sometimes the donor cells attack the recipient's body, called graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The chemotherapy drug cyclophosphamide helps reduce the risk and severity of GVHD. Researchers want to learn if using a lower dose of cyclophosphamide may reduce the drug's side effects while maintaining its effectiveness. Such an approach is being used in an ongoing clinical study at the NIH with promising results, but this approach has not been tested for transplants using lower doses of chemotherapy/radiation prior to the transplant. Objective: To learn if using a lower dose of cyclophosphamide will help people have a successful transplant and have fewer problems and side effects. Eligibility: Adults ages 18-85 who have a blood cancer that did not respond well to standard treatments or is at high risk for relapse without transplant, and their donors. Design: Participants may be screened with the following: Medical history Physical exam Blood and urine tests Heart and lung tests Body imaging scans (they may get a contrast agent) Spinal tap Bone marrow biopsy Participants will be hospitalized for 4-6 weeks. They will have a central venous catheter placed in a chest or neck vein. It will be used to give medicines, transfusions, and the donor cells, and to take blood. In the week before transplant, they will get 2 chemotherapy drugs and radiation. After the transplant, they will get the study drug for 2 days. They will take other drugs for up to 2 months. Participants must stay near NIH for 3 months after discharge for weekly study visits. Then they will have visits every 3-12 months until 5 years after transplant. Participants and donors will give blood, bone marrow, saliva, cheek swab, urine, and stool samples for research.
A Study of Engineered Donor Grafts (Orca-T) in Recipients Undergoing Allogeneic Transplantation...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaAcute Lymphoid Leukemia5 moreThis study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of an engineered donor graft ("Orca-T", a T-cell-Depleted Graft With Additional Infusion of Conventional T Cells and Regulatory T Cells) in participants undergoing myeloablative allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant transplantation for hematologic malignancies.
A Study of MGD024 in Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Hematologic Malignancies
LeukemiaAcute Myeloid10 moreCP-MGD024-01 is a Phase 1, open-label, multi-center study of MGD024 as a single agent in patients with select blood cancers that have not responded to treatment with standard therapies or who have relapsed after treatment. The study is designed to determine the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (affect of the body on the drug), pharmacodynamic (affect of the drug on the body), immunogenicity (development of antibodies against the drug), and preliminary anti-cancer effect of MGD024. Patients will receive treatment with MGD024 in consecutive 28-day cycles for a study treatment period of up to 12 cycles (approximately 1 year) or until treatment or study discontinuation criteria are met. Response assessments will be performed after Cycle 1 and then after every even numbered cycle starting with Cycle 2 until progression or study treatment discontinuation. Patients will be checked for side effects throughout the study.
Haplo-PBSC+Cord vs Haplo-PBSC+BM for Hematological Malignancies Undergoing Allo-HSCT
Hematological MalignanciesHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationThe objective of this study was to explore whether the combination with umbilical cord blood (UCB) is associated with superior disease-free survival (DFS) in the setting of haploidentical donors (HID) transplantation.
Safety Study of CC312 in Adult Patients With Relapsed/Refractory CD19 Positive B-cell Hematologic...
Non-hodgkin LymphomaAcute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia1 moreThis is a Phase 1, open-label, dose-escalation study to evaluate the safety, PK, PD and immunogenicity of CC312 following intravenous doses of CC312 in patients with relapsed and refractory (r/r) CD19 expressing B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma and B-cell lymphocytic leukemia.
CD7 CAR-T for Patients With r/r CD7+ T-ALL/T-LBL
NeoplasmsHematologic Neoplasms2 moreThis is a single-arm, open-label, single-center, phase I study. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety of CD7 CAR-T therapy for patients with CD7-positive relapsed or refractory T-ALL/LBL, and to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of CD7 CAR-T in patients.
DETERMINE (Determining Extended Therapeutic Indications for Existing Drugs in Rare Molecularly Defined...
Solid TumorHaematological MalignancyDETERMINE is an open-label phase II/III trial. It will look at targeted treatments in rare cancers or common cancers with rare genetic change (mutation). Participants must have a cancer with an identified mutation. This could be found during routine testing or as part of another research programme. The DETERMINE trial will recruit adults, teenagers and children. If a drug is found to benefit a new patient group, the study team will work with the NHS and the Cancer Drugs Funds to see if these drugs can be available for patients in the future. This clinicaltrials.gov record refers to the Overall Trial Protocol (Master Screening Record), additional records will be added to clinicaltrials.gov for each treatment arm.
Safety and Efficacy of Allogenic CD19-CAR-NK Cells in Treatmenting r/r B-cell Hematologic Malignancies...
Acute Lymphoblastic LeukemiaB-cell Lymphoma1 moreThis is an open label, single-arm, Phase I study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of allogenic CD19-CAR-NK cells in subjects with refractory or relapsed B-cell hematologic malignancies. A leukapheresis procedure will be performed to manufacture Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) modified NK cells. Prior to allogenic CD19-CAR-NK cells infusion subjects will receive lymphodepleting therapy with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide and etoposide.
DETERMINE Trial Treatment Arm 04: Trastuzumab in Combination With Pertuzumab in Adult, Teenage/Young...
Solid TumorHaematological Malignancy9 moreThis clinical trial is looking at a combination of drugs called trastuzumab and pertuzumab. This combination of drugs is approved as standard of care treatment for adult patients with metastatic breast cancer. This means it has gone through clinical trials and been approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK. Trastuzumab and pertuzumab work in patients with these types of cancers which have a molecular alteration called HER2 amplification or HER2 activating mutation. Investigators now wish to find out if it will be useful in treating patients with other cancer types which are also HER2 amplified or HER2 mutated. If the results are positive, the study team will work with the NHS and the Cancer Drugs Fund to see if these drugs can be routinely accessed for patients in the future. This trial is part of a trial programme called DETERMINE. The programme will also look at other anti-cancer drugs in the same way, through matching the drug to rare cancer types or ones with specific mutations.