Efficacy Analysis of Comparison of CAMS(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences)-2005 Trial and CAMS-2009...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaPediatricThe investigators adopted the CAMS(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences)-2009 trial for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients between 2009 to 2015, in which a risk-stratified strategy and dose-dense intensive chemotherapy were introduced. The outcomes of CAMS-2009 trial were retrospectively analyzed, and compared to the CAMS-2005 trial.
Study of Intracellular Nucleotide Pools Determination as Biomarker of the Efficacy of the Induction...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaTreatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) consists in two main phases: induction and consolidation. Standard chemotherapy combination for induction treatment associates cytarabine (AraC), a nucleoside analog, and an anthracycline (most often daunorubucin). About 60-70% of patients achieved complete remission after this standard chemotherapy. As cytarabine competes with endogenous nucleotides to exert its activity, the aim of this protocol is to study in vivo the effect of intracellular nucleotide pools on the efficacy of the induction treatment. Thus, intracellular nucleotides levels will be determined in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients with acute myeloid leukemia before treatment, and results will be compared with the efficacy of the treatment. This parameter will be assessed by the achievement of complete remission.
Transfusion in Adult Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaAcute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is a haematological malignant disease characterized by an uncontrolled proliferation of immature hematopoietic cells. Over the last two decades, clinical trials have demonstrated an improved response rate in younger adult AML. Aggressive induction plus more potent intensification programs with chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy plus stem cell transplantation (SCT) has improved treatment results. Advances in understanding disease biology, improvements in induction and consolidation program, and better supportive care have also all contributed. A number of clinical and laboratory characteristics influence the response to treatment and, thus, the survival of patients with AML. Among them, cytogenetic at diagnosis represents the most important prognostic variable. However, other factors may have a prognostic value and may influence patient's outcome. Anaemia and thrombocytopenia are cardinal manifestations of AML. Over the last decades, it has become apparent that the frequency of allogeneic blood transfusions can modify host immunity and clinical outcomes. Anaemia has long been recognized as an adverse prognostic factor in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), which represents a pre-leukemic disease. Red blood cell (RBC) transfusion need was identified as a strong and independent risk factor for survival in MDS, for which the presence and severity of anaemia were attributed to a clonally advanced and biologically more aggressive disease. Based on these data, we retrospectively assessed the prognostic value of RBC and platelet transfusions at the time of diagnosis and the frequency of transfusions during the first induction course of chemotherapy in a large unselected group of patients with previously untreated AML.
An Observational Post Authorisation Study to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy in Patients Receiving...
Myelodysplastic SyndromesLeukemia5 moreThe study design is a prospective, non-interventional, observational single arm study. A minimum of 150 patients will be recruited from approximately 30 haematology/oncology sites in the Netherlands. In all cases, the decision to treat the patient with azacitidine was already made prior to the decision to enter the subject into the study. Recruitment will continue until end of June 2015, provided a minimum of 150 patients have been included in the study. When this date is reached, all patients on azacitidine will continue to be followed until the last patient enrolled has been followed for 12 months.
Evaluation of Cytidine Deaminase for Patient Suffering of a Myelodysplastic Syndrom or an AML Treated...
Myeloid LeukemiaMyelodysplastic SyndromesMyelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is a group of medical conditions derived from progressive bone marrow failure that result in ineffective production of blood cells. Depending on the severity, MDS reduces the quality of life to the point of being life-threatening. There is a probability of death at all stages of the disease, due to complications and co-morbidities, with progression to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) being the worst evolution. Azacytidine is a nucleosidic analog with original epigenetic mechanism of action that is widely used for treating a variety of myelodysplasic syndromes. Although generally well tolerated, severe and sometimes life-threatening toxicities were unexpectedly observed in some patients. Genetic polymorphism affecting cytidine deaminase (CDA), the liver enzyme responsible for azacytidine detoxification step, could be responsible for poor clinical outcome due to on the one hand to severe toxicities in deficient patients, and on the other hand on treatment failure in ultrametabolizer patients.This clinical study aims at correlating the values in CDA levels with the risk of drug-related toxicities and to the clinical response to azacytidine treatment.
Effectiveness of Dasatinib in Adult Patients With Chronic Myeloid Leukemia in China: A Multicenter,...
LeukemiaMyelogenous2 moreThe primary objective is to describe the effectiveness of dasatinib (Sprycel®) in CML patients in China in the real-world clinical practice setting.
Vascular Dysfunction and Antiangiogenic Therapy
Solid TumorTumor Angiogenesis2 moreproject is a pilot prospective, longitudinal, before-after, open label multicentric study.
Busulfan Pharmacokinetic Analysis and GST Pharmacogenetic Profile in Adults Undergoing Hematological...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaThe correlation between Busulfan Pharmacokinetics in AML transplanted patients and their GST (A1,T1,M1 and P1), MDR-1 genetic profile. If a pre-genetic testing of those genes can be utilized as biomarkers of SOS and/or HGVHD. This study is not an interventional study it is only checking the GST gene and MDR-1 gene
Effect of Age on Treatment Decision-Making in Elderly Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaPatients aged ≥70 years with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have a poorer prognosis than those aged 60 to 69 years. The poor outcome is the result of treatment-related toxicity in elderly patients, owing to comorbidities, the greater possibility of other hematopoietic disorders, and a biologically poor risk prognosis. Anthracycline- and cytarabine-based therapy, administered for 3 and 7 days respectively (3 +7), remains the standard induction therapy for this patient population. This approach improved survival compared with supportive care (median, 5 vs. 3 months) for adults aged ≥ 65 years. However, the overall view has been that the results of intensive chemotherapy in elderly patients remain poor. Although complete remission (CR) rates of 40% to 80% can be achieved in highly selected populations, long-term survival has been poor. Furthermore, most clinical trials have only enrolled patients with an adequate performance status (PS). Prognostic models have been developed from clinical trial data to predict the outcomes for older patients. However; each model relies on chronologic age. Age is a surrogate measure for both changes in tumor biology and patient characteristics. Understanding which patients are likely to benefit from intensive therapies versus low-intensity therapies or supportive care is critical. The definition of "fit" to undergo intensive induction therapy has not been established, and the therapeutic choice is mainly determined by physician and patient decision. In older patients, low-dose cytarabine (LD-AraC) has been demonstrated to be more beneficial than best supportive care and hydroxyurea. The recent availability of new drugs that could have an improved side effect profile and, in some cases, bioavailability might offer future improvement for this patient population. In this setting, the investigators have tended to consider, since 2007, patients aged ≥70 years as potential candidates for alternative lower intensity therapy (LD-AraC, hypomethylating agents) even when they presented in good physical condition. The investigators goal was to determine whether age ≥ 70 years could represent a useful and simple cut off for treatment decision-making in clinical practice and whether low-intensity therapy could be an alternative therapeutic approach to intensive chemotherapy even for patients aged ≥ 70 years who were theoretically "fit" (WHO /ECOG/ PS of ≤ 2).
Economic Analysis of Blood Product Transfusions According to the Treatment of Acute Myeloid Leukaemia...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaBlood transfusion requirement represents one of the most significant cost driver associated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In addition to an increase prevalence of co morbidities in older patients, AML in older patients is more often associated with adverse features than in younger adults. Physicians might therefore decide to offer palliative or supportive care rather than intensive chemotherapy. An alternative treatment could be low-intensity therapy, such as LD-AraC or hypomethylating agents, which demonstrated better results than only Best Supportive care (BSC). Blood transfusion requirement represents one of the most significant cost driver associated with AML. The present study assesses the cost-effectiveness of intensive chemotherapy versus Best Supportive Care (BSC) versus alternative therapies (hypomethylating agents, low-dose cytosine arabinoside (LD-AraC), or other investigational drugs) in elderly patients aged 70 years or older regarding blood product transfusions from a French payer perspective. Intensive chemotherapy and BSC were the comparators in this analysis, since they continue to represent the most commonly used treatment for elderly AML according to the defined status of patients considered as 'fit' or 'unfit' for intensive chemotherapy.