View clinical trials related to Leukemia.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to describe the observed safety profile of Xospata® 40 mg tablet when administered in patients with relapsed or refractory AML with FLT3 mutation in routine clinical practice in Korea.
A Phase 1 Study Evaluating BAFFR-targeting CAR T Cells for Patients with Relapsed or Refractory B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
This is a multi-centers, single-arm, open label, Phase 2 clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CD7 CAR T cells in subjects with relapsed or refractory T-cell leukemia/lymphoma. Seventy subjects will be enrolled. CD7 CAR T cells will be given once intravenously at one dose (1×106, with an allowance of ± 20%) in patients received previous HSCT donor-derived CAR T cells. Patients who received fresh donor derived CD7 CAR T cells were given initial dose of 1×106, with an allowance of ± 20%. The dose levels may be adjusted during the study based on the specific number of cells on the day of fresh CAR T cells infusion, due to at this time all the patients have completed lymphodepleting, so we adopt the allowance of ±20% for each group of absolute infusion cells. And patients who were lower than the designed dose group were also given infusion, but they will be either assigned to the lower dose group or exclude from safety analysis of designed dose group.
An Open Label, 3-arm, Randomised Phase II Study to Compare the Safety and Efficacy of Ponatinib in Combination With Either Chemotherapy or Blinatumomab With Imatinib Plus Chemotherapy as Front-line Therapy for Patients Aged 55 Years and Over With Philadelphia Chromosome Positive (Ph+ or BCR-ABL+) Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL)
A single-arm trial using Tocilizumab for acute GVHD prophylaxis after haploidentical HSCT.
A phase I-II trial based on the combination of three drugs regimen LDAC or Azacitidine + Venetoclax + Quizartinib that in this population could be well tolerated by a sequential type administration. The first objective is to achieve rapid control of the disease, using two different schemes, one based in Azacitidine and the other in LDAC, by dose escalation in phase I of the trial. The second goal is to prevent relapse through a maintenance schedule. Phase II will study the efficacy and safety of the recommended dose for Phase II
After complete remission, elderly AML patients cannot tolerate hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and standard-dose consolidation chemotherapy, and the 5-year survival rate is around 10%. Therefore, it is necessary to explore treatment strategy that can support chemotherapy or improve immunity. Umbilical cord blood is rich in hematopoietic stem cells and immune cells. However,Cord blood transplantation for adults is still being explored. The application of cord blood in supportive treatment can be actively explored. Cord blood has low immunogenicity and is unlikely to cause Graft versus host disease (GVHD), and the infusion is relatively safe. The Department of Hematology of Shanghai Ruijin Hospital has conducted a related phase II clinical study, and found that cord blood transfusion reduced the chance of infection and increased the 2-year survival. Our subject is a prospective single-arm clinical study. It is planned to recruit 20 elderly AML patients to explore whether the application of cord blood infusion can further improve the prognosis of patients during their consolidation chemotherapy.
The investigators have formulated an oral preparation of arsenic trioxide (oral-ATO), and shown that it is efficacious for APL in R1, inducing CR2 in more than 90% of patients [8,9]. Furthermore, in an effort to prevent relapse, the investigators have moved oral-ATO forward to the maintenance of CR1. This strategy results in favorable overall-survival (OS) and leukemia-free-survival (LFS) [10], implying that prolonged treatment with oral-ATO may prevent relapses. Current protocols have incorporated i.v.-ATO in the treatment of newly-diagnosed APL [11-15]. For regimens comprising oral-ATO, ATRA and chemotherapy, 5-year OS in excess of 90% is achieved [11-15]. The investigators have also published long-term data showing the use of oral-ATO is highly effective and safe in the relapsed and frontline settings [16,17]. In this study, the investigators evaluate the use of oral-ATO and ATRA based induction regimens in newly diagnosed patients with APL with no of minimal chemotherapy in a prospective multicentre phase 2 study.
The AML-12 study investigates the efficacy and toxicity of standard induction chemotherapy with idarubicin and cytarabine (IC) with G-CSF priming followed by a risk-adapted post remission therapy for patients up to the age of 70 diagnosed with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Modifications from the previous protocol AML-03 (NCT01723657) include removal of etoposide in induction, limitation of the GCSF priming to the induction phase and categorization of post remission therapy (stem cell transplant or 2 high dose cytarabine consolidations) according to diagnostic genetics as well as post-remission clearance of measurable residual disease. The aims of these modifications are to improve the overall survival and leukemia free survival of acute myeloid leukemia patients with a risk-adapted approach.
The purpose of this study is to find the maximum dose of huCART19-IL18 cells that is safe for use in humans with CD19+ cancers.