Safety and Immunogenicity of Recombinant WT1 Antigen-Specific Cancer Immunotherapeutic Combined...
Acute Myelogenous LeukemiaMyeloid Leukemia in Remission1 moreThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and the efficacy of combined treatment strategy of WT1ASCI, infusion of ex vivo regulatory T cells depleted T lymphocytes and in vivo regulatory T cells depletion as post-consolidation therapy in patients with WT1-positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia. The study will also evaluate the clinical activity and immune response of this approach in bad risk patients in CR1 and all patients in CR2 or CR3, non eligible for an allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
A Study of SKLB1028 in Subjects With Relapsed/Refractory Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaPatients will receive oral SKLB1028 for 28 days to study the side effects, tolerability and best dose for treating relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia With FLT3 Mutations.
Efficacy and Safety Study of Recombinant Human Arginase 1 in Patients With Relapsed or Refractory...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaTo evaluate the efficacy of PEG-BCT-100 in patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in terms of remission rate.
The Use of Decitabine as Induction Therapy for Acute Myeloid Leukemia With Complex and/or Monosomal...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaComplex KaryotypeAcute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous group of diseases with distinct clinicopathologic features sharing in common an abnormal increase in myeloblasts in blood and bone marrow (BM). In about 5-10% patients, the myeloblasts exhibit chromosomal abnormalities (complex and/or monosomal karyotype, CK/MK*) that are associated with refractoriness to conventional chemotherapy and an extremely bad prognosis. Standard induction chemotherapy for AML comprises daunorubicin and cytarabine, the "7+3" regimen. However, treatment is largely ineffective for CK/MK AML with a temporary clearance of blasts achieved in only 30-40% cases and the cumulative toxicities resulting from repeated courses of chemotherapy have significantly increased the morbidity and mortality risks in subsequent allogeneic BMT. Therefore, standard treatment is unsatisfactory and there is an unmet clinical need for more effective and less toxic induction regimen. Both previous and recent studies showed that 10 day course of decitabine (20 mg/m2/day) induced remission in 70-100% patients with CK/MK AML, particularly those with TP53 mutations. In this study, patients with CK/MK AML will be treated with decitabine to induce remission. Bone marrow examination will be performed after each course until complete clearance of blasts or disease progression. Patients achieving CR/CRi (see below) will continue to receive 4 more courses, after which patients eligible for BMT and for whom donors are available will receive curative BMT. We reckon that the time it takes for 4 courses of decitabine will suffice for transplantation workup in HK. . Patients ineligible for BMT will continue to receive decitabine until leukemia progression. The response rate, leukemia free survival (LFS), overall survival (OS) and percentage of patients who can be bridged to BMT will be compared with historical 7+3 regimen control.
DLAAG in the Treatment of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Myelodysplastic Syndrome With Blast Excess...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaMyelodysplastic SyndromeThe purpose of this study is to evaluate of the clinical efficacy and safety of DLAAG protocol in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome with blast excess
Evaluation of Measurable Residual Disease in Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia as Surrogate Endpoint...
LeukemiaMyeloid1 moreObjectives To demonstrate that measurable residual disease assessed by multiparameter flow cytometry during intensive treatment is a surrogate for overall survival and thus an early read-out for drug efficacy Study design Surrogate endpoint trial to establish that measurable residual disease assessed by multiparameter flow cytometry during intensive treatment is a surrogate for overall survival
Study of Allogeneic Double Negative T Cells (DNT-UHN-1) in Patients With High Risk Acute Myeloid...
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaThis study aims to determine the safety and toxicity of incremental doses of Double Negative T (DNT) cells in human subjects with high risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML). DNT cells are mature T lymphocytes that comprise ~1% of white blood cells in humans. Injection of DNTs from healthy donors has been demonstrated to be effective against AML cells. DNT cells will be collected from healthy volunteers and injected into patients.
A Prospective, Interventional Study Assessing Response to Cytarabine, Daunorubicin and Etoposide...
Acute Myeloid Leukemiain RelapseOne-third to one-half of patients with AML relapse and in general relapsed AML patients have a poor prognosis. The treatment of relapsed AML consists of induction chemotherapy followed by Allogenic Stem Cell Transplant (ASCT). However, at present there is no standard salvage chemotherapy regimen for relapsed AML, as no study has shown any one regimen to be significantly superior. Anthracyclines, Fludarabine, Etoposide and cytarabineare active agents in AMLand have been used as monotherapy and in combination in refractory and relapsed AML patients. According to previous studies the present CR rate of different regimens ranges from 50-70%. A retrospective analysis (unpublished) conducted at IRCH, AIIMS on relapsed AML patients treated with ADE (Cytarabine, Daunorubicin and Etoposide) chemotherapy showed the CR rates of approximately 70%. Therefore, we have planned this study to test the efficacy and toxicity of ADE induction chemotherapy in relapsed AML patients in a prospective manner.
Evaluation of the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of PHI 101 for the...
Relapsed or Refractory Acute Myeloid LeukemiaThe purpose of this study is to find out the maximum tolerable dose and safety of PHI-101, novel FLT3 inhibitor in the treatment of relapsed or refractory AML for patients who have received standard therapy or cannot tolerate standard therapy, and/or for whom no standard therapy exists. There will be two parts to the study, which we will call Phase Ia and Phase Ib. Phase Ia is called the dose escalation. Approximately 20 to 24 patients are planned to be enrolled into Phase Ia. Phase 1a is conducted to determine the best dose and schedule of dosing of PHI-101 to be used in Phase 1b. There will be 5 different dose levels of PHI-101 given to patients in Phase Ia. Phase Ib is called the dose expansion. Approximately 14-34 patients (approximately 14-17 patients in each of the 2 cohorts planned) of each cohort are planned in Phase Ib based on study design. Phase Ib is also being conducted to assess anti-leukemia response, changes in transfusion requirements, and safety of PHI-101 at the dose level identified during Phase Ia.
HLA-mismatched Microtransplantation for High Risk Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Acute Myeloid LeukemiaTo compare the antitumor efficacy and toxicity of Idarubicin and cytarabine in combination with or not with infusions of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized HLA-mismatched donor peripheral blood stem cells in patients with newly diagnosed high-risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML).