Clinical Trials for Childhood ALL
Dana-Farber/Boston Children's is actively engaged in leukemia clinical trials, leading to new therapies and aiming for eventual cures. Our clinical team works closely with our leukemia researchers to quickly develop new treatments based on the latest scientific discoveries.
Clinical trials at Dana-Farber/Boston Children's are designed to investigate new therapies for refractory or relapsed leukemia, novel combinations of chemotherapy drugs, and promising new treatment agents. Our researchers are conducting randomized clinical studies to reduce treatment intensity to lessen side effects and to test more intense and newer therapies to improve cure rates.
Long-Term Outlook for Children Treated for ALL
The prognosis for children treated for ALL is very positive. The five-year, event-free childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survival rate (which refers to survival without relapse) is about 85 percent. Ultimately, more than 90 percent of patients are cured of the disease.
The prognosis (chance of recovery) and treatment options depend on:
- Age and white blood cell count at diagnosis
- How quickly and how low the leukemia cell count drops after initial treatment
- The subtype of leukemia
- Whether there are certain changes in the chromosomes of lymphocytes
- Whether the leukemia is seen in the spinal fluid at diagnosis
As with any cancer, prognosis and long-term survival can vary greatly. Relapse can occur during any stage of treatment, even with aggressive therapy, or may occur months or years after treatment has ended.
For patients with relapsed ALL, CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) T-cell therapy is a promising new treatment. Dana-Farber/Boston Children's is a certified treatment center for providing this therapy. In general, relapsed ALL cells become resistant to chemotherapy drugs. CAR T-cell therapy instead utilizes genetic engineering of a patient's own T-cells to target and destroy cancer cells.
Prompt medical attention and aggressive therapy are important for the best prognosis, and continuous follow-up care is essential. New methods are continually being discovered to improve treatment and decrease side effects of the treatment for the disease.
Long-Term Follow-Up
Childhood cancer was once considered to always be fatal, but today, the majority of children diagnosed with cancer can expect to be long-term survivors.
Survivorship comes with numerous complex issues: the long-term effects of treatment and the risk of second cancers, as well as social and psychological concerns.
Since 1993, physicians, nurses, researchers, and psychologists in our pediatric cancer survivorship programs at the David B. Perini Jr. Quality of Life Clinic at Dana-Farber/Boston Children's have helped thousands of survivors of childhood cancers, treated at the institute and at other hospitals in New England and elsewhere, to manage these long-term consequences.