Pilot Evaluation of a Microfluidic Assay to Detect Minimal Residual Disease and Predict Relapse in AML Patients
NCT ID: NCT03488862
Last Updated: 2021-01-13
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
34 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2018-03-01
2020-10-28
Brief Summary
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Procedures (methods): A total of 40 eligible subjects will be treated per standard of care with either SCT or induction and consolidation chemotherapy (ICC) based on the appropriate AML treatment paradigm for their disease. Peripheral blood (10 ml) for microfluidic chip analysis and possible Immune Monitoring Core Facility analysis will be collected along with routine lab draws prior to SCT. Patients in remission after SCT or those with confirmed remission by bone marrow biopsy after induction chemotherapy will be followed for 1 year; and peripheral blood (20 ml) will be collected to assess MRD by standard methods or by microfluidic chip analysis on a monthly basis. In addition, bone marrow biopsies will be performed at the end of consolidation (typically 5 months from remission), and at 1-year post remission in non-transplant patients. In transplanted patients, bone marrow biopsies will be collected at + 30 days, + 90 days, +180 days, and +360 days after SCT.
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Detailed Description
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The microfluidics assay being evaluated in this study is relatively inexpensive, broadly applicable, as it identifies almost all (\>90%) of AML cells, and easy to use. The microfluidic chip device is constructed with antibodies immobilized within the chip that can detect cell surface antigens commonly expressed on leukemic cells (ie, CD33, CD34, CD117, and CD123) directly in the peripheral blood without requiring preprocessing. The captured cells are then exposed to fluorescent antibodies targeting surface proteins that are aberrantly expressed on AML blasts (eg CD7, CD56 etc.), and fluorescence microscopy is used to identify captured cells that express an aberrant surface protein. The investigators have already completed a pilot study using this technology to monitor 5 AML patients after SCT. Because this assay required peripheral blood and not a bone marrow biopsy, 39 microfluidic tests could be carried out compared to only 8 PCR, MFC, FISH, and/or microscopy tests. Moreover, the frequent testing allowed us to observe signs of impending relapse earlier than the bone marrow biopsy-based test. The investigators plan to build on our findings in this trial and test the applicability of using the microfluidic assay for early signs of AML relapse. If successful, the microfluidic chip assay could be employed for serial MRD evaluations both in the post-SCT setting and in patients with AML undergoing conventional chemotherapy while providing a venue for the detailed management of a particular patient's AML including response to therapy and risk for disease recurrence.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
--For the purposes of this study, induction chemotherapy is any therapy intended to induce remission in AML patients that combines anthracycline/anthracenedione with cytarabine; or combinations of cytarabine at a dose of ≥1 g/m2/dose x ≥ 5 doses with a purine analogue. Liposomal combinations of anthracycline and cytarabine are also considered induction therapy. Subjects receiving investigational induction therapies will be eligible as long as the standard-of-care agents within the induction therapy fulfills criteria above.
For the purposes of this study, specific choice of consolidation chemotherapy, or decision to pursue SCT in remission are not mandated prior to enrollment, as these decisions are not typically made until after induction chemotherapy has been given.
2. Subjects scheduled for SCT or ICC must have confirmed CD33-, CD34-, CD117- or CD123-positive disease to qualify for enrollment to undergo serial blood draws for assessment of MRD by microfluidic chip analysis.
3. Subjects may be enrolled after beginning induction chemotherapy, provided that sufficient AML blasts are available in the pre-treatment peripheral blood or bone marrow sample to confirm that the blasts express CD33, CD34, CD117 or CD123.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Patients who are receiving non-intense therapies for AML that do not contain anthracycline/anthracenedione or dual analog therapies. Such non-intense therapies include: DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (azacitidine/decitabine), combinations including DNA methyltransferase inhibitors, cytarabine monotherapy at doses below 1 g/m2 x 5, purine analog monotherapy or investigational therapies that are not combined with standard induction agents.
3. Subjects who test negative for the leukemic blasts surface antigens CD33, CD34, CD117, and CD123 are ineligible for inclusion to undergo serial blood draws for assessment of MRD by microfluidic chip analysis.
18 Years
99 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Paul Armistead, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
UNC
Locations
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UNC Lineberger
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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LCCC 1702
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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