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Therapy resistance remains the major obstacle to cure in many types of cancer. In particular in leukemia, therapy resistance depends on leukemic stem cells (LSC) that exhibit inherent therapy resistance to multiple drugs and contribute to overt leukemic relapse. Cellular therapies alone or in combination with other targeted or chemotherapeutic approaches can overcome drug mediated therapy resistance and induce long lasting remissions. Several trials have shown that adoptive transfer of allogeneic NK cells can induce clinical remission in patients with myeloid malignancies. In addition, the antileukemic efficacy of alloreactive NK cells has been shown to facilitate cure after T cell depleted haploidentical stem cell transplantation. Recently, it was demonstrated that absence of NKGD2 ligand expression on leukemic stem cells determines therapy resistance and immune escape towards NK cells in AML. PARP1 inhibitors can induce re-expression of NKG2D ligands. This phase I/II clinical trial will evaluate the combination of NK cell therapy and PARP inhibition by Talazoparib in patients with poor prognosis AML as characterized by Minimal Residual Disease (MRD) or overt relapse with less than 20% bone marrow blasts. The hypothesis that allogeneic NK cell therapy combined with PARP inhibition will increase the response rate (CR/CRi for relapsed/ refractory patients and MRD-response for MRD positive patients) from 35% to 60% will be tested. The co-primary endpoints are i) response to treatment defined as complete remission (CR) for patients with overt leukemia at time of inclusion and MRD decrease >1log10 for patients with rising MRD at time of inclusion as well as ii) safety and feasibility of the protocol. Key secondary endpoints are event free survival and overall survival. Two cohorts will be assessed independently: patients with i) overt leukemia and ii) patients with rising MRD at time of inclusion. Safety and feasibility will be analyzed continuously during the entire trial. The NAKIP-AML trial will analyze efficacy and feasibility of NK cell transplantation together with PARP1 inhibition.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with confirmed diagnosis of AML according to WHO-2016 (Arber, Orazi et al. 2016) (except acute promyelocytic leukemia) with either de novo AML, AML after preceding myelodysplastic or myeloproliferative syndrome (MDS/MPD), and therapy- related AML (t-AML) after previous cytotoxic therapy or radiation are eligible.
A) Relapsed or Refractory AML with less than 20% bone marrow blasts and less than 20% blasts in peripheral blood.
B) Rising MRD levels (>3 fold) as detected by either molecular genetics or flow cytometry in patients still in hematologic remission.
Patients who received at least one line of AML therapy. This is defined as either stem cell transplantation or intensive AML therapy or palliative AML therapy containing at least one of the following drugs Azacitidine, Decitabine, Cytarabine, Venetoclax or an FLT3 inhibitor..
Discontinuation of prior AML treatment before the start of study treatment for at least 107 days for cytotoxic agents and ≥ 53 half-lives for non-cytotoxic / investigational drug treatment preceding the first dose of trial medications.
Age ≥ 18 years
ECOG ≤2
Pregnancy and childbearing potential:
Willingness of patients to adhere to protocol specific requirements and capacity to give written informed consent
Ability of patient to understand the character and individual consequences of clinical trial
Following receipt of verbal and written information about the study, the patient must provide signed informed consent before any study related activity is carried out.
Suitable donor for NK cell transplantation
Exclusion criteria
Patients presenting with any of the following criteria will not be included in the trial:
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (AML M3)
AML in which less than 10% of the blasts express the CD34 surface marker expression as analyzed at the local laboratory.
Known central nervous system manifestation of AML
Uncontrolled or significant cardiovascular disease, including any of the following:
Pregnant or nursing women
Chronically impaired renal function (creatinine clearance < 30 ml / min)
Organ dysfunction (e.g. liver, kidney, lung, heart) which in the opinion of the treating physician decreases life expectancy to less than three months.
Kidney failure with a calculated glomerular filtration rate <30 ml/min or bilirubin >2-fold the upper reference limit of the local laboratory.
HIV infection and/or active hepatitis B or C infection (active hepatitis B defined by HBs Ag positivity, anti HBs positivity or anti-HBC positivity, active hepatitis C defined by positive virus load).
Evidence or history of severe non-leukemia associated bleeding diathesis or coagulopathy
Uncontrolled active infection
Concurrent malignancies other than AML with an estimated life expectancy of less than two years
Known hypersensitivity to PARP inhibitors
Isolated extramedullary manifestation of AML
Patients < 100 days after allogeneic stem cell transplantation at the time of screening
Expected non-compliance of patient
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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54 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Carsten Müller-Tidow, Prof. Dr.; Richard F. Schlenk, Prof.Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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