This clinical trial studies the use of TdT-3, a special type of cell therapy that uses a patient’s own modified immune cells, in treating acute lymphoblastic leukemia or lymphoblastic lymphoma. These are serious blood cancers that have not responded to standard treatments or have returned after previous treatment. The therapy involves taking the patient’s own T-cells (a type of immune cell), modifying them in a laboratory to better recognize and fight cancer cells, and then returning them to the patient through an infusion into the bloodstream.
The purpose of this study is to test the safety of TdT-3 treatment and determine the most appropriate dose to use in future studies. Before receiving the cell therapy, patients will be given two medications called Fludarabine and Cyclophosphamide to prepare their body for the treatment. The treatment involves collecting the patient’s blood cells through a procedure called leukapheresis, processing these cells in a laboratory to create the TdT-3 therapy, and then giving the modified cells back to the patient.
During the study, doctors will closely monitor patients for any side effects and check how well the treatment works. They will take blood samples and perform various tests to track the modified cells in the body and measure the patient’s response to the treatment. The study will also look at how long the beneficial effects of the treatment last and whether patients can proceed to other treatments like stem cell transplantation if needed.



Norway