Clinical trials guide
Leukemia Clinical Trials, Explained
Leukemia is a cancer of the blood and bone marrow studied in many clinical trials, including studies for both adults and children.
This page explains in general terms how trials relate to leukemia care. It does not recommend a trial or judge your eligibility. Your oncology team is the best guide for your situation.
Educational only — not medical advice. Cancer Explained does not recommend clinical trials or determine eligibility. Whether a clinical trial is appropriate for you depends on your diagnosis, test results, and treatment history — please discuss clinical trials with your oncology team.
Current research areas
Broad, well-established directions researchers are exploring — not specific trials.
Targeted therapy research
Studies of treatments aimed at specific features of some leukemias.
Immunotherapy research
Studies of approaches that engage the immune system.
Stem cell transplant research
Studies of transplant approaches and supportive care around them.
Survivorship and quality-of-life studies
Studies of well-being during and after treatment.
How trials fit into leukemia care
Clinical trials play a large role in leukemia care, and many people are treated within studies. In treatment trials, people usually receive at least the standard of care.
Only your team can review whether a specific trial fits. Trials are one option to talk through together.
Phases you may hear about
Leukemia trials span all phases and include studies designed just for children. The phase alone does not tell you if a trial is a fit; your team can explain what a study involves.
Questions patients ask
Would a trial replace standard care?
In most treatment trials, everyone receives at least standard care.
Can children join leukemia trials?
Yes. There are trials designed just for children, with a parent or guardian giving permission.
How do I find trials?
You can search official listings and ask your oncology team for help.
Questions to ask your oncologist
- Could a clinical trial be an option for me?
- What would the study be testing?
- Would I still receive standard treatment?
- What are the possible benefits and risks?
- How often would I need visits or tests?
- Who pays for the study treatment?
- What happens if I want to stop?
Words to know
Related Cancer Explained articles
Official resources
Educational only — not medical advice. Cancer Explained does not recommend clinical trials or determine eligibility. Whether a clinical trial is appropriate for you depends on your diagnosis, test results, and treatment history — please discuss clinical trials with your oncology team.