| Literature DB >> 25628469 |
Antonio Palumbo1, Sara Bringhen1, Maria-Victoria Mateos2, Alessandra Larocca1, Thierry Facon3, Shaji K Kumar4, Massimo Offidani5, Philip McCarthy6, Andrea Evangelista7, Sagar Lonial8, Sonja Zweegman9, Pellegrino Musto10, Evangelos Terpos11, Andrew Belch12, Roman Hajek13, Heinz Ludwig14, A Keith Stewart15, Philippe Moreau16, Kenneth Anderson17, Hermann Einsele18, Brian G M Durie19, Meletios A Dimopoulos11, Ola Landgren20, Jesus F San Miguel21, Paul Richardson22, Pieter Sonneveld23, S Vincent Rajkumar4.
Abstract
We conducted a pooled analysis of 869 individual newly diagnosed elderly patient data from 3 prospective trials. At diagnosis, a geriatric assessment had been performed. An additive scoring system (range 0-5), based on age, comorbidities, and cognitive and physical conditions, was developed to identify 3 groups: fit (score = 0, 39%), intermediate fitness (score = 1, 31%), and frail (score ≥2, 30%). The 3-year overall survival was 84% in fit, 76% in intermediate-fitness (hazard ratio [HR], 1.61; P = .042), and 57% in frail (HR, 3.57; P < .001) patients. The cumulative incidence of grade ≥3 nonhematologic adverse events at 12 months was 22.2% in fit, 26.4% in intermediate-fitness (HR, 1.23; P = .217), and 34.0% in frail (HR, 1.74; P < .001) patients. The cumulative incidence of treatment discontinuation at 12 months was 16.5% in fit, 20.8% in intermediate-fitness (HR, 1.41; P = .052), and 31.2% in frail (HR, 2.21; P < .001) patients. Our frailty score predicts mortality and the risk of toxicity in elderly myeloma patients. The International Myeloma Working group proposes this score for the measurement of frailty in designing future clinical trials. These trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01093136 (EMN01), #NCT01190787 (26866138MMY2069), and #NCT01346787 (IST-CAR-506).Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25628469 PMCID: PMC4375104 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-12-615187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113