New Vaccine-Drug combo targets Hard-to-Treat myeloma

NCT ID NCT06799026

First seen Nov 01, 2025 · Last updated May 23, 2026 · Updated 30 times

Summary

This early-phase study tests whether a personalized cancer vaccine (made by fusing a patient's own immune cells with their tumor cells) combined with the drug elranatamab is safe and works for people with multiple myeloma that has come back or stopped responding to prior treatments. About 25 adults with at least three prior therapies will receive the vaccine plus elranatamab. The goal is to see if this combination can control the disease, though lifelong management may still be needed.

Disclaimer Read more

This is a summary of the original study . Summaries may miss details or leave out important information. Before applying or accepting participation, make sure you have read and understood the full study. Curemydisease.com takes no responsibility whatsoever for anything missed, misunderstood, or acted upon as a result of our summary — we know it does not capture everything.

Get updates

Get notified about this study

Sign up to get updates when this study changes or when new studies for MULTIPLE MYELOMA are added.

Our safety recommendation!

By submitting, you agree to our Terms of use

Contacts and locations

Study contacts

  • Contact

    Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••

  • Contact

    Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••

Locations

  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

    RECRUITING

    Boston, Massachusetts, 02215, United States

    Contact Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••

    Contact

    Contact Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••

  • Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

    RECRUITING

    Boston, Massachusetts, 02215, United States

    Contact Phone: •••-•••-•••• Email: •••••@•••••

    Contact

Conditions

Explore the condition pages connected to this study.