View clinical trials related to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML).
Filter by:Acute myeloid leukemia is a malignant disorder characterized by the rapid, uncontrolled proliferation of malignant clonal hematopoietic stem cells that accumulate as immature, undifferentiated cells (blasts) in the bone marrow and circulation. APG-115 is a potent and orally active small-molecule MDM2 inhibitor, it binds to MDM2 protein and shows potent cell growth inhibitory activity in vitro with low nanomolar potencies in a subset of human cancer cell lines. APG-115 has demonstrated its strong antitumor activities with either daily or less frequent dosing-schedules in the acute leukemia xenograft models. This is a phase 1b, open-label, three-stages study that will initially evaluate the safety and PK/PD profile of APG-115 as a single agent, followed by a combination of APG-115 + azacytidine or cytarabine in R/R AML or MDS subjects. Patients will continue treatment for maximally 6 cycles or until progression of disease or unacceptable toxicity is observed or administrative discontinuation whichever occurs first. Patients who continue to be benefit after 6 cycles' treatment will receive additional cycles of treatment until progression of disease, unacceptable toxicity is observed or administrative discontinuation. (As long as it is proven safe).
The purpose of the phase 1 portion (dose escalation) of the study will be to establish an optimally safe and biologically active recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) and/or to determine maximum tolerated dose (MTD) for gilteritinib in sequential combination with fludarabine, cytarabine and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (FLAG). The purpose of the phase 2 portion (dose expansion) is to determine complete remission (CR) rates and composite complete remission (CRc) rates after two cycles of therapy. The study will also assess safety, tolerability and toxicities of gilteritinib in combination with FLAG, evaluate FLT3 inhibition, assess pharmacokinetics (PK), perform serial measurements of minimal residual disease, obtain preliminary estimates of 1-year event free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) rate and assess the acceptability as well as palatability of the formulation. One cycle is defined as 28 days of treatment. A participant completing 1 or 2 treatment cycles in phase 1 or 2 will have the option to participate in long term treatment (LTT) with gilteritinib (for up to 2 years).
This dose-escalating phase I trial assesses for the first time the safety, the side effects and the harmlessness, as well as the therapeutical benefit of the new study drug UniCAR02-T-CD123 in patients with hematologic and lymphatic malignancies positive for CD123 marker. The UniCAR02-T-CD123 drug is a combination of a cellular component (UniCAR02-T) with a recombinant antibody derivative (TM123) which together forms the active drug.
The purpose of this study is to explore safety, tolerability, including the maximum tolerated dose and the recommended Phase II dose (RP2D), and antitumor activity of NMS-03592088 in adult patients with relapsed or refractory Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) or Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML).
This clinical trial involves individuals who have been diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML), Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS), Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML), or MDS/myeloproliferative neoplasm-unclassifiable (MDS/MPN-unclassifiable) and are planning to have an allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant ("bone marrow transplant"). The goal of this research study is to (1) test the safety of adding the study drug, Venetoclax, to a standard of care conditioning regimen for bone marrow transplantation as a possible means of eliminating residual (left-over) disease prior to transplant, (2) to test the safety of combination Venetoclax and azacitidine as "maintenance therapy" after transplant to possibly prevent disease recurrence and (3) to test the safety of combination Venetoclax and oral decitabine/cedazuridine as "maintenance therapy" after transplant to possibly prevent disease recurrence. - The name of the study drug involved in this study is Venetoclax. - It is expected that about 68 people will take part in this research study.
This is a Phase 1, open-label, dose escalation study to determine the safety and preliminary efficacy of voruciclib monotherapy in subjects with relapsed/refractory B cell malignancies or AML after failure of standard therapies or voruciclib in combination with venetoclax in subjects with relapsed or refractory AML
This leukemia is characterized by a poor prognosis for most patients, as they have a high relapse rate despite aggressive treatment with chemotherapy agents and allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. It has been proposed that relapse can be attributed to a leukemic cells population with quiescence properties that are resistant to chemotherapy, known as leukemic stem cells (LSCs). Clinical trials shown a major LSCs percentage than diagnosis correlated with worst prognosis or minimal residual disease with AML. AML is most common in adults and represents about 40% of all leukemia types in American Continent. In Mexican patients with AML age median is 32 years, lower than other international series. Genomic and functional studies have identified two classes of mutations, which cooperate during AML development. Somatic mutations have been identified recently that codify for isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH). These genes codify key metabolic enzymes, which convert isocitrate into α-ketoglutarate (α-KG).15-16From which IDH1 and IDH2 genes presenta high frequency of mutations in AML and other types of tumors. IDH mutations affect mainly active site residues (for example, IDH1 R132, IDH2 R140 or IDH2 R172), resulting in the normal enzymatic function loss abnormally converting α-KG to 2-hydroxiglutarate (2-HG). "Oncometabolyte" 2-HG may competitively inhibit multiple α-KG depending dioxygenases, including key epigenetic regulators as histones demethylases and TET proteins. Consequently, IDH mutations are associated with chromatin alterations including global alteration of histones and NDA methylation. This is the reason of the need to identify such mutations of genes (IDH1/IDH2) in patients with SMD and AML entering Hematology service of the Hospital General de Mexico from 2017 to 2019, and determine clinical impact in prognosis and monitoring the response to therapy, as well as prognosis and survival.
This is a registry study in adult patients with newly diagnosed or refractory/relapsed acute myeloid leukemia. Investigator's sites: 51 sites in Germany. Primary objectives: - Identification of epidemiological data on AML: age, prognostic factors and subgroup distributions. Incidence and age distribution are compared with the data of population-related tumor registry. - Evaluation of the most important patient-relevant clinical endpoints (outcomes): relapse-free survival (RFS) / time to relapse (TTR), calculation of cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR) and overall survival (OS) - Documentation of treatment strategy
This study seeks to examine treatment therapy that will reduced regimen-related toxicity and relapse while promoting rapid immune reconstitution with limited serious graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) and also improve disease-free survival and quality of life. The investigators propose to evaluate the safety and efficacy of selective naive T-cell depleted (by TCRɑβ and CD45RA depletion, respectively) haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) following reduced intensity conditioning regimen that avoids radiation in patients with hematologic malignancies that have relapsed or are refractory following prior allogeneic transplantation. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: - To estimate engraftment by day +30 post-transplant in patients who receive TCRɑβ-depleted and CD45RA-depleted haploidentical donor progenitor cell transplantation following reduced intensity conditioning regimen without radiation. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: - Assess the safety and feasibility of the addition of Blinatumomab in the early post-engraftment period in patients with CD19+ malignancy. - Estimate the incidence of malignant relapse, event-free survival, and overall survival at one-year post-transplantation. - Estimate incidence and severity of acute and chronic (GVHD). - Estimate the rate of transplant related mortality (TRM) in the first 100 days after transplantation.
The primary objectives of this study are to assess: (1) whether the combination of BP1001 plus venetoclax plus decitabine provides greater efficacy (Complete Remission [CR], Complete Remission with incomplete hematologic recovery [CRi], Complete Remission with partial hematologic recovery [CRh], than venetoclax plus decitabine alone (by historical comparison) in participants with untreated AML that cannot or elect not to be treated with more intensive chemotherapy; (2) whether BP1001-based treatment provides greater efficacy (CR, CRi, CRh) than intensive chemotherapy (by historical comparison) in participants with refractory/relapsed AML.