Top Early Phase Hematologic Oncology Trials to Watch at EHA 2026

Top Early Phase Hematologic Oncology Trials to Watch at EHA 2026

European Hematology Association Congress 2026, taking place June 11-14 at Stockholmsmässan in Stockholm, with virtual access through the congress platform, is expected to showcase major advances across malignant and non-malignant hematology.

While late-phase studies often influence current standards of care, early-phase and translational trials highlight the scientific innovation and biologic insight driving the next generation of advances. This article highlights the top early-phase trials to watch at EHA 2026 across hematologic oncology.

CB-011 Allogeneic Anti-BCMA CAR-T Therapy in R/R Multiple Myeloma: The Phase 1 CaMMouflage Trial

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Binod Dhakal, from Medical College of Wisconsin.

Background Points

  • The platform incorporates four genome edits, including CAR insertion, TRAC knockout to reduce GVHD risk, B2M knockout to limit T-cell-mediated rejection and B2M-HLA-E fusion insertion designed to reduce NK cell-mediated clearance.
  • Allogeneic CAR-T approaches reflect ongoing efforts to develop “off-the-shelf” cellular therapies with improved availability and scalability.

This trial is evaluating the safety, efficacy and recommended phase 2 dose of CB-011 in patients with R/R Multiple Myeloma, while exploring immune cloaking as a next-generation CAR-T engineering strategy.

Ziftomenib Combined With Intensive Induction (7+3) for Newly Diagnosed NPM1-Mutated or KMT2A-Rearranged AML: Results From the Phase 1 KOMET-007 Trial

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Amer M. Zeidan, from Yale Comprehensive Cancer Center and Yale University.

Background Points

  • NPM1-mutated and KMT2A-rearranged AML are highly dependent on menin-mediated transcriptional programs that sustain leukemogenesis
  • Ziftomenib is a selective oral menin inhibitor that has already demonstrated meaningful activity in R/R NPM1-mutated AML, including achievement of molecular remissions.

KOMET-007 is one of the key trials evaluating whether menin inhibition can be integrated earlier into AML treatment, particularly in combination with intensive induction chemotherapy. Long-term follow-up may further support a molecularly stratified treatment approach in AML.

BGB-16673 in Relapsed/Refractory CLL/SLL: Updated Results From the Phase 1 CaDAnCe-101 Trial

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Stephan Stilgenbauer, from Ulm University.

Background Points

  • BGB-16673 is a novel BTK degrader designed to eliminate BTK through proteasome-mediated degradation rather than conventional enzymatic inhibition.
  • The agent may overcome resistance mechanisms associated with BTK mutations and persistent B-cell receptor signaling.

The ongoing open-label CaDAnCe-101 trial is evaluating BGB-16673 monotherapy in patients with R/R B-cell malignancies, including CLL/SLL.

 

ENABLE: Updated Results From the Phase 1 Trial of ELVN-001, a Novel Inhibitor of BCR::ABL1, in Previously Treated CP-CML

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Dennis Kim, from Princess Margaret Cancer Centre.

Background Points

  • ELVN-001 is a selective ATP-competitive BCR::ABL1 inhibitor designed to retain activity against a broad range of resistance mutations.
  • ELVN-001 was developed with a pharmacokinetic profile supporting once-daily dosing, reduced food restrictions and potentially fewer drug-drug interactions.

The ENABLE trial is evaluating whether ELVN-001 can maintain anti-leukemic activity while improving tolerability and treatment flexibility in previously treated CP-CML. Activity in T315I-mutated and asciminib-resistant disease would be particularly relevant given the growing complexity of sequencing later-line CML therapies.

Golcadomide Plus Pola-RCHP in Newly Diagnosed Aggressive B-Cell Lymphoma: Results From a Phase Ib Trial (CC-220-DLBCL-001)

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Maria Bouzani, from Evaggelismos General Hospital.

Background Points

  • CELMoDs represent a class of cereblon-targeting immunomodulatory agents with enhanced degradation of Ikaros and Aiolos, resulting in broader immunologic and direct antitumor effects compared with earlier IMiDs.
  • Golcadomide is being explored beyond plasma-cell disorders, reflecting growing interest in extending CELMoD biology into aggressive lymphomas.

This study evaluates whether incorporation of an oral CELMoD can further improve frontline outcomes in aggressive B-cell lymphoma without substantially compromising tolerability. Follow-up efficacy data are particularly relevant in aggressive lymphoma, where early relapse strongly influences long-term outcomes.

INCA033989, a Mutant CALR-Specific Monoclonal Antibody, in Patients With Myelofibrosis: Results From the Phase 1 INCA033989-101 and INCA033989-102 Trials

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Claire Harrison, from Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust.

Background Points

  • Myelofibrosis is a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by bone marrow fibrosis, splenomegaly, anemia and constitutional symptoms, with CALR mutations present in approximately 25-35% of patients.
  • INCA033989 selectively targets mutCALR-driven signaling through interaction with the thrombopoietin receptor complex.

Direct targeting of mutant CALR represents a biologically distinct approach aimed at interfering with a key disease-driving mechanism. The INCA033989-101 and -102 are evaluating this approach both as monotherapy and in combination with ruxolitinib.

First-in-Human Alpaca-Derived Nanobody-Based Bispecific Epitope CD5 CAR-T Cells in R/R T-ALL: Phase 1/2 Trial

The abstract will be presented at the oral session by first author Jing Pan, from Institute of Hematology & Blood Diseases Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College.

Background Points

  • Previous humanized CD5 CAR-T approaches demonstrated high remission activity but were associated with delayed CAR-T expansion.
  • Investigators developed a novel alpaca-derived nanobody-based bispecific epitope CD5 CAR (NbCD5 CAR) designed to accelerate CAR-T functionality and expansion kinetics.

CAR-T development in T-cell malignancies remains particularly challenging because of fratricide and shared antigen expression. The study explores a first-in-human nanobody-based CD5 CAR-T approach for R/R T-ALL