Overview

Phase I/II Trial of ATRA and TCP in Patients With Relapsed or Refractory AML and no Intensive Treatment is Possible

Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2017-09-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Longterm disease-free survival (DFS) of older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains poor. The vast majority of AML patients relapses within two years after start of therapy1,2. In Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APL, AML M3), all-trans-retinoic-acid (ATRA; Tretinoin) induces differentiation and subsequently clinical remission. So far effective differentiation therapy does not exist in other AML subtypes. Recent preclinical data suggest that the combinatorial use of ATRA and tranylcypromine (TCP), an irreversible Monoamine-Oxidase (MAO) and Lysin-specific demethylase (LSD) inhibitor that also inhibits LSD1 (a histone H3 Lysine 4 demethylase), induces leukemia cell differentiation and leukemic stem cell exhaustion in vitro and in vivo in non-APL AML subtypes. In this Phase I/II study the investigators will explore the feasibility, safety, as well as efficacy and of Tretinoin/TCP treatment in patients with relapsed or refractory AML or in patients with AML who are not eligible for intensive treatment. Patients will be treated with daily increasing doses of TCP (initially 10 mg/day, then +10 mg each day up to 80mg/d). After 7 days, ATRA will be added at a fixed dose (45 mg/sqm/day). Overall, 16 evaluable patients are going to be treated. The primary endpoint is the fraction of patients that achieve CR, CRp( complete response with incomplete recovery of platelets), CRi (complete response with incomplete recovery of granulocytes) and PR. Secondary endpoints are tolerability, safety as well as progression-free survival and overall survival. Serum levels of TCP will be regularly analyzed. Pharmacodynamic analyses will be performed with analyses of the inhibition of LSD1 by TCP. Further analyses will address the changes in Histone H3 lysine 4 tri demethylase (H3K4me3) levels in AML blasts and the differentiation status of AML blasts. Taken together, this Phase I/II study will analyze feasibility, pharmacodynamics and effectivity of ATRA and TCP as differentiation therapy in AML.
Phase:
Phase 1/Phase 2
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
Treatments:
Tranylcypromine
Tretinoin