View clinical trials related to Leukemia, Myeloid.
Filter by:This project will collect data on patients with acute myeloid leukemia in the United Kingdom who were treated with two new targeted therapies during the coronavirus pandemic
The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of olverembatinib(HQP1351) in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP) who are resistant and/or intolerant to at least two second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The efficacy of olverembatinib is determined by evaluating the major molecular responses(MMR) at the and of 12 months.
VOR33 long-term follow-up (LTFU) study
Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) is a new contributor in the French healthcare system. APN is part of a multidisciplinary team and aim to monitor patients under the coordination of the doctor particularly in onco-hematology. The aim of the study is to describe the different perceptions and expectations of APN monitoring according to patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and their care team. This study will involve 10 patients, recruited over a provisional period of 5 months and 25 member of care team. Patients and their care team will be asked about their perceptions and expectations of APN participation in (AML monitoring) during a semi-structured interviews.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Venetoclax Combining Chidamide and Azacitidine (VCA) in the Treatment of relapsed and/or refractory AML
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and determine the recommended dose for further clinical evaluation of ELVN-001 in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia with and without T315I mutations in patients who are relapsed, refractory or intolerant to TKIs.
The detailed molecular and cellular mechanisms underpinning the clinical activity of most chemotherapies in cancers remain incompletely understood. Understanding how these drugs really act is a prerequisite for their rational therapeutic optimization. Recent observations suggest that early molecular and cellular changes in cancer cells upon chemotherapy exposure may dictate their long-term fate. We aim to address this question in previously untreated adult Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) patients treated with anthracycline/cytarabine association (either as free drugs, '7+3' regimen, or in liposomal formulation, CPX-351) by sequentially sampling peripheral blood during the first course of therapy, and by performing an early bone marrow reassessment. We will apply single cell RNA sequencing and multiparameter flow cytometry to correlate dynamic phenotypic landscapes with clinical outcomes (remission achievement and relapse-free survival). The study will be carried in two phases. First, a feasibility phase will be carried in the first 20 patients irrespective of the genetic make-up of their leukemic cells to identify the optimal pre-analytical conditions for single-cell transcriptional profiling. Second, an expansion phase will be carried focusing on two genetically subsets of patients chosen on the basis of their relative abundance and variability of clinical outcome, namely NPM1c-mutated AML (30% of patients, 60% cure rate) and NPM1-wildtype intermediate-risk AML (25% of patients, 40% cure rate), to correlate single-cell fates with remission and with long-term remission-free survival.
The clinical trial was designed to prove that Arsenic plus ATRA possibly had an effect on improving the symptoms, reducing the early mortality rate and prolonging the total survival time of patients with newly diagnosed or relapsed AML.
A Phase 2a clinical trial on up to n=200 male and female subjects 18 years and over who were diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Subjects are randomised in approximately a 1:1 ratio to receive standard of care treatment plus either pyronaridine (PND) or placebo. Quality of life parameters are measured. Visits include physical examinations, and blood draws for complete blood count with differential (CBC) and complete metabolic panel (CMP). Survival of subjects is tracked in Year 2.
The objectives of this study are to describe patient demographics, clinical and disease characteristics and treatment patterns of Chronic Lymphoid Leukaemia (CML) in Hungary. The primary endpoint of this study is the overall survival of CML patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in Hungary. The Overall Survival (OS) of all enrolled patients, OS by sequence pattern and by the number of treatment lines will be analyzed. Secondary objectives are description of the treatment length in 1st and later lines, incidence and prevalence of CML, the patient demographics (as age, gender, comorbidities), average number of patients' comorbidities, most frequent comorbidities and patient number with comorbidities at baseline and at different treatment lines by investigated Thyrosine Kinase Inhibitor (TKI), distribution of the investigated TKI therapies by treatment lines