View clinical trials related to Chronic Myeloid Leukemia.
Filter by:This was a retrospective descriptive analysis of health care claims data using the IQVIA open source medical and pharmacy claims databases. Patients were grouped into one of two cohorts depending on the index medication. All patients with at least 1 pharmacy claim for asciminib occurring between 01 January 2021 and 30 April 2022 in (Phase 1) were grouped into the asciminib cohort. A data refresh was conducted (Phase 1 refresh) and all patients with at least 1 pharmacy claim for asciminib occurring between 01 January 2021 and 29 August 2022 were included in the asciminib cohort. Patients were required to have at least 6 months of continuous data availability prior to the start of treatment and were followed from the start of treatment until the end of available follow-up. The end of available follow up in open source data was defined as 1) last claim date in medical or pharmacy data, OR 2) last day of index pharmacy stability, OR 3) end of study period, whichever came first. While no post-index data availability were required in Phase 1, a subgroup analysis was conducted in patients with at least 3 and 6 months of available follow-up after the index date in Phase 1 refresh. In Phase 2 of the study, patients with no exposure to asciminib and with at least 1 pharmacy claim for imatinib mesylate, dasatinib, nilotinib, bosutinib or ponatinib were indexed to the first new tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) observed between 01 January 2021 and 29 August 2022 and grouped into the other TKI cohort. The index date was the initiation date of the index medication. Patients were required to have linkage to the open-source medical claims database and at least 3 months of available follow-up after the index date.
The aim of the retrospective study was to further characterize the prevalence of comorbid conditions as well as the use of concomitant medications in newly diagnosed CML patients in a real-world setting. Hematologists from ten Polish hematological tertiary care centers were asked to analyze medical records for all consecutive CML patients diagnosed with chronic phase CML between January 1st 2005 and December 31st 2014.
This was a non-interventional observational study within the routine chronic myeloid leukemia treatment practice; no further tests were required apart from the assessments routinely performed for Chronic myeloid leukemia patients treated with nilotinib.
A retrospective multi-center cohort study design was used to address the study objectives, using medical records obtained from three clinical centers in France.
The study was a retrospective, non-interventional patient chart review and used a panel of oncologists/hematologists from the US to collect real-world clinical outcomes of patients with CML-CP in 3L+ and those with the T315I mutation.
Retrospective, non-interventional observational cohort study conducted among patients with CML.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of azacitidine,venetoclax,and flumatinib in newly diagnosed Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute leukemia and accelerated phase or blast phase chronic myeloid leukemia patients.
Uncontrolled, central registration system, all-case, multicenter, special drug use-results surveillance.
This study aims to monitor the levels of soluble L-selectin (sCD62L) and secreted protein acidic rich in cysteine (SPARC) in chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CP-CML) patients at baseline and after three and six months of imatinib therapy and evaluated the effect of imatinib on their levels and correlated their levels to clinical and laboratory parameters.
It is essential to improve clinical efficiency and management of hematological and oncological patients treated on an outpatient basis. The most promising operative way to achieve this result is the development of tele-oncology platforms, that allow not only a telemedicine visit, but also the patient support in the daily management of the disease and related disorders, as well as treatments and their complications. In this perspective, the RITA communication platform should be able to support the patient, the caregiver, the physician and the general practitioner in the management of the disease and its treatments.