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Acute Myeloid Leukemia and Markers of Leukemia Stem Cells (CLL1 and CD45RA)

Acute Myeloid Leukemia and Markers of Leukemia Stem Cells (CLL1 and CD45RA)

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a malignant disorder of the bone marrow and the most common form of acute leukemia in adults. Patient with AML have the shortest survival compared to other forms of leukemia. In the past 6 years, several new therapies have been approved. Biomarkers are in urgent need to guide therapeutic regimen selection in order to maximize the benefit of available therapies and minimize treatment toxicity. Current standard practice is to perform bone marrow biopsy at end of treatment cycle (each cycle around 28 days), and based on bone marrow finding, to decide further treatment plan. It is invasive and time consuming. The research we are proposing here is to investigate whether tracking leukemia stem cells (LSC) in peripheral blood during early treatment cycle may provide a non-invasive method to predict therapeutic outcome at end of treatment cycle. Our retrospective study have found that LSC fractional change, defined by two LSC markers, named CLL1 and CD45RA, is highly correlated with therapeutic outcome. Further more, CLL1 and CD45RA positive LSC fraction demonstrates a high concordance between bone marrow and peripheral blood, offering the opportunity to track CLL1 and CD45RA positive LSC fraction non-invasively in peripheral blood during treatment. This pilot study will allow us to decide whether testing CLL1 and CD45RA positive LSC in peripheral blood during leukemia treatment is feasible in clinical practice. This result will lay the foundation for designing future trials using CLL1 and CD45RA positive LSC fractional change to optimize therapeutic strategy for patients with AML.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia
  • ability to receive treatment for acute myeloid leukemia at the research center
  • elevated values of CLL1A and CD45RA positive cells at the time of diagnosis

Study details
    Acute Myeloid Leukemia

NCT06297551

Suhu Liu

22 March 2024

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