Clinical trialUNITERAREApr 15
Researchers are looking for patients with a specific type of blood cancer called Philadelphia chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia to test a new treatment combination. The treatment uses chemotherapy drugs (EPOCH), sometimes combined with rituximab (a protein therapy), plus a targeted drug called ponatinib. This is a Phase 2 trial, meaning it's testing whether the treatment works and is safe in a larger group of patients.
WHY IT MATTERSThis trial is now actively recruiting patients with newly-diagnosed Ph+ ALL/lymphoma and offers access to ponatinib, a third-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor that may improve outcomes for this aggressive blood cancer.
Clinical trialUNITERAREApr 5
Researchers are testing a new cancer treatment that takes a patient's own immune cells, modifies them in a lab to recognize and attack their specific cancer, and then puts them back into the body. This Phase 1 trial is for people with blood cancers like leukemia and lymphoma. The treatment is personalized—each patient's cells are customized based on their individual cancer's unique mutations.
WHY IT MATTERSThis trial offers patients with hematologic malignancies access to a cutting-edge personalized immunotherapy that targets their cancer's unique mutations, potentially offering a new treatment option for those who may have limited alternatives.
Clinical trialUNITERAREApr 3
Researchers are testing a new type of cell therapy made from umbilical cord blood to treat T-cell lymphoma that has stopped responding to other treatments. The therapy uses special immune cells called NK cells that are engineered to recognize and attack cancer cells. This is an early-stage study (Phase 1) that is now accepting patients.
WHY IT MATTERSThis trial offers a potential new treatment option for patients with relapsed or refractory T-cell lymphoma who have limited alternatives after standard therapies fail, with enrollment beginning in April 2026.