View clinical trials related to Leukemia, Acute.
Filter by:Background: acute lymphoblastic leukemia is the most common childhood cancer and relapse is the main reason for treatment failure in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The aim of this study: is to assess the relapse of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in pediatric patients treated in the Child's Central Teaching Hospital/ Baghdad. Methods: A retrospective study that reviewed 521 children with newly diagnosed ALL for children below 15 years during the period from 1st of January 2013 to 1st of March 2020 in the hemato-oncology ward in the Child's Central Teaching Hospital in Baghdad, with a total duration of follow-up for two years post last starting treatment (till 1st of March 2022 ).
The purpose of this study is to describe the main clinical characteristics of patients with de novo acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated inside the third level hospitals converted to Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) attention for the metropolitan area of Mexico City.
This is a prospective, observational cohort study to assess the frequency with which neutropenic patients with hematologic malignancies and hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients are colonized with fluoroquinolone-resistant Enterobacterales (FQRE) and the clinical impact of FQRE colonization.
Many cancers are being treated more effectively nowadays due to the raised awareness and early detection as well as advancement in researches and technology. Despite the rising number of cancer survivors in the coming years, these survivors are still plagued by the poor quality of life due to physical and psychological impairment. According to the National Cancer Registry Report from 2007-2011, haematological cancer is one of the ten most common cancers in Malaysian population. Many haematological cancer survivors in Malaysia are reportedly having poor quality of life due to multiple physical and emotional impairments which leads to further disability in life. It is thus an important effort to identify the rehabilitation needs in these cancer survivors to implement alternatives to improve the disease outcome through cancer rehabilitation.
This study is designed to evaluate the safety, efficacy and Population Pharmacokinetics of Oral Posaconazole in Children with leukemia.
This study evaluates the feasibility of using two information technology tools in patients undergoing Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cell (CART) therapy and other Cytokine Release Syndrome (CRS)-eliciting treatments such as CD123 BITE. The first is an Apple iPad® application called the BMT Roadmap, which shows information about the participant's health. The second is a wearable activity monitoring device. Health information technology tools such as Roadmap system and the activity monitoring device may enable caregivers and patients to become more active participants in their healthcare.
SIR-POSA is a phase II trial of peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) transplantation from a partially compatible family (Haplo) donor in patients with a blood tumor (myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute leukemia) treated for the prevention of primary fungal infections with posaconazole. The aim is evaluate the composite end-point graft-versus-host disease-free, relapse-free survival (GRFS) in these patients and evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of posaconazole oral tablets as primary antifungal prophylaxis.
Based on the investigator's previous data on risk classification for acute leukemia,the investigators will design a set of panels to detect the gene expression and genomic variants (SNPs, mutation, insertion, deletion and fusion genes, etc), and identify the high-risk subtypes of acute leukemia, such as Ph-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Furthermore, the target therapy (Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors,et.al) will be used to treat the identified patients. In addition, more sensitive minimal residual disease (MRD) detection technology will be designed and used to detect the MRD in patients to early predict the disease relapse.