NCT07300683

Fratricide-Resistant Autologous Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells Targeting CCR9 for the Treatment of T Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia/ Lymphoma

Study Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if anti-CCR9 CAR T cells (which will be made using the patient's own blood cells) are safe and which dose should be used in children and adults with T cell leukaemia and lymphoma. Participants will: * have T cells collected from their blood and these T cells will be used to make the CAR-T cells in a specialized laboratory. * be admitted at the hospital a week before the CAR T cells infusion to receive a short course of chemotherapy drugs which prepare the body to receive the CAR T cells. * be given the CAR T cells into their vein. * stay in the hospital for a minimum of 2 weeks to be closely monitored * following discharge, participants will come to the clinic for check-ups (approximately 12 visits in the first two years) * during screening, treatment and follow up visits, participants will have physical examination, collection of blood samples and bone marrow biopsies and/or imaging tests (CT/PET-CT scans) depending on their type of T-cell cancer.

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Interventions

CARCCR9 T cellsBIOLOGICAL
Anti-CCR9 CAR T cells

Study Locations

FacilityCityStateCountry
University College London HospitalsLondonUnited Kingdom

Official Trial Information

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov. Last updated: April 14, 2026