View clinical trials related to Amyloidosis; Systemic.
Filter by:Achievement of complete hematologic response (CHR) is vital for systemic AL amyloidosis. Currently, the CHR rate of daratumumab, bortezomib, and dexamethasone (DBD) is close to 60%. Considering that Bcl-2 inhibitor is effective for AL amyloidosis with t(11; 14) and the median hematologic onset time of DBD is 7 days. We design a a prospective study on AL amyloidosis with t(11; 14). All patients receive DBD at the beginning. Patient will receive DBD for at least 6 cycles if achieve rapid hematologic response at day 7, while other patients will receive daratumumab, venetoclax and dexamethasone.
This is a Phase 2 open-label extension study to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability, and clinical activity of AT-02. AT-02 is an investigational medicinal product being developed to treat systemic amyloidosis.
This is a multicenter, international, three-part, Phase 1 study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and PK of rising single doses of AT-02 in healthy volunteers and in subjects with systemic amyloidosis and to assess the safety, tolerability, and PK of multiple doses of AT-02 in subjects with systemic amyloidosis.
This is a single center Phase 1 study is to evaluate the biodistribution of radiolabeled AT-03 in patients with systemic amyloidosis.
Patients with light chain (AL) amyloidosis who have advanced cardiac damage are at risk of premature mortality. There is ongoing unmet need for effective therapies to rapidly induce deep hematologic response and decrease the early death rate. Lately, trials of daratumumab in newly-diagnosed and relapsed/refractory AL amyloidosis have shown dramatic response rates. However, the benefits of upfront daratumumab in stage III AL patients, especially stage IIIb patients, have not yet been demonstrated definitely in prospective studies. Therefore, we designed a phase II, single arm clinical trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of co-administration of daratumumab with bortezomib and dexamethasone (BD) regimen in treatment-naïve patients with Mayo 04 stage III AL amyloidosis. We planned to enroll 40 patients, who would receive daratumumab and BD treatment for a total duration of 12 months. The primary endpoint is complete response and very good partial response at 3 months after treatment initiation. Secondary endpoints include overall survival, organ response and adverse events.
Survival of intermediate and high-risk primary light chain amyloidosis (pAL) remains poor due to high mortality within 3-6 months of diagnosis. Rapidly effective regimens such as bortezomib, cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone (BCD) still failed to overcome the poor prognosis in very advanced pAL amyloidosis patients. Recently, doxycycline was demonstrated to induce disruption of fibril formation and reduce the number of intact fibrils in transgenic mouse model of pAL amyloidosis. Furthermore, case-control study suggested that adjuvant oral doxycycline could improve response and survival in cardiac pAL amyloidosis, which necessities further confirmation through a randomized trial. Therefore, we designed a multi-center randomized open-label controlled study to investigate the efficacy and safety of co-administration of oral doxycycline with BCD regimen in treatment-naïve patients with Mayo stage II-III pAL amyloidosis. The primary outcome progression-free survival, and secondary endpoints including overall survival, hematologic response, organ response and toxicity of doxycycline will be evaluated.
This is a single arm, open label study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of propylene glycol-free melphalan hydrochloride in patients with AL amyloidosis. Treatment will be comprised of propylene glycol-free melphalan hydrochloride administered intravenously at a dose of 70-100 mg/m2/day on Days -3 and -2 as conditioning prior to autologous stem cell transplantation.