View clinical trials related to Leukemia, Myeloid.
Filter by:This study aims to assess the therapeutic efficacy and safety of venetoclax in combination with azacitidine and CAG(VA-CAG) as induction regimen in newly diagnosed young patients with acute myeloid leukemia(AML).
The study "GALAXY33" is an open-label, prospective, nonrandomized, one arm phase I clinical trial in which patients with relapsed AML after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation will be transplanted with CD33-deleted CD34+ HSC derived from the initially matched family donor.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of venetoclax combined with CACAG regimen in the treatment of newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia.
This study aims to investigate the efficacy and safety of cladribine, combined with low-dose cytarabine and venetoclax (CAV regimen) for relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (R/R AML).
This is a prospective, single-arm, open-label, single dose-finding and dose-expansion study that evaluates the safety, tolerability, PK, and anti-tumor efficacy of LCAR-AMDR cells in subjects with relapsed/refractory Acute Myeloid Leukemia who received adequate standard therapy.
This is a single arm study to evaluate the safety and efficiency of azacitidine (AZA) combination with venetoclax and ATRA in Patients With Newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia. Azacitidine, venetoclax and ATRA, may stop the growth of cancer cells, either by demethylation, by promoting cells differentiation or by killing the cells.
This is a clinical study to evaluate the bioequivalence of dasatinib tablet produced by Chia Tai Tianqing Pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd. and Sprycel® produced by Bristol Myers Squibb after single dose in healthy subjects, so as to provide reference for clinical evaluation and clinical medication; to observe the safety of the dasatinib tablet and the reference drug Sprycel® in healthy subjects under fasting and fed states.
This phase 2 single-arm study aims to demonstrate the efficacy of strong cytochrome inhibition with ketoconazole to reduce dasatinib dosage for adults with chronic myelogenous leukemia. Researchers will describe response rates and adverse events.
The goal of this project is to see if two new potential treatments (defactinib and the combination tablet of decitabine/cedazuridine) can safely be combined to improve outcomes in people with high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), certain forms of Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML), and Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukaemia (CMML). Decitabine/cedazuridine is approved for use by the Australian Therapeutics Goods Administration (TGA) as treatment for MDS. Defactinib is an experimental treatment. This means it is not an approved treatment for MDS in Australia. So far it has been given to over 625 patients in studies across the world. All study participants will receive active treatment, there is no placebo. Participants will take the decitabine/cedazuridine treatment once a day for 5 days in a row (day 1 to day 5) on its own for the first month (cycle). From month 2 participants will take the decitabine/cedazuridine treatment and will also take the defactinib treatment, both for 5 days in a row on days 1 to day 5 each month (cycle). Defactinib is taken twice a day.
ERASE is part of the MyeloMATCH initiative, Young Adult Basket and is a Tier 2 study. The study is comparing the use of Cytarabine to Cytarabine and Venetoclax, Daunorubicin/Cytarabine Liposome and Venetoclax, and Azacitidine and Venetoclax.