Literature DB >> 26937956

Real-World Use of 3rd Line Therapy for Multiple Myeloma in Austria: An Austrian Myeloma Registry (AMR) Analysis of the Therapeutic Landscape and Clinical Outcomes prior to the Use of Next Generation Myeloma Therapeutics.

Ella Willenbacher1,2, Roman Weger2, Ursula Rochau2,3, Uwe Siebert2,3,4,5, Wolfgang Willenbacher1,2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Clinical trials demonstrate improving survival in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) after treatment. However, it is unclear whether increased survival translates to a similar benefit in a real world setting.
METHODS: We analyzed the overall survival of 347 multiple myeloma patients in Austria by means of a national registry (AMR), focused on results from 3rd and later lines of therapy. This benchmark was chosen to define a baseline prior to the broad application of upcoming 2nd generation drugs (carfilzomib, pomalidomide).
RESULTS: Projected 10 years survival for patients with MM in Austria is estimated to be 56% in patients diagnosed in between the years 2011-2014, 21% in patients with a diagnosis made between 2000-2005, and 39% in those with a diagnosis made between 2006-2010). For the same intervals a significant increase in the use of both bortezomib, lenalidomide and thalidomide-so called IMiDs (from 2005 onwards) and their simultaneous use in combination therapies (from 2010 onwards) could be shown. The use of autologous transplantation (ASCT) remained more or less constant at ~ 35% of patients in the 1st line setting over the whole period, comparing well to international practice patterns, while the use of 2nd line ASCT increased from 5.5% to 18.7% of patients. Patients in 3rd or later line treatment (n = 105), showed that even in relapsed and refractory disease median survival was 27 months with a considerable proportion of long-term survivors (~20%). CONCLUSION & PERSPECTIVE: With the expected emergence of additional active anti-myeloma compounds, we aim to assess survival in patients with relapsed and refractory MM.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26937956      PMCID: PMC4777410          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147381

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Prognosis and survival of patients suffering from Multiple Myeloma (MM) has been considerably improved within the last decade [1]. This improvement may be mostly due to the introduction of the so called “novel agents" of either the proteasome inhibitor (PI) type (first in-class: bortezomibBTZ), or the immune modulatory drug-type (IMiDs), like thalidomide (THAL) and lenalidomide (LEN). However, all patients will develop clinical resistance or refractoriness to these compounds, leading to what is known as double refractory MM (DRMM) in which survival is poor (9 months) [2]. No generally accepted standard of therapy has been established to treat these patients and multiple permutations of all active myeloma therapeutics have been used in in treatment of DRMM with no clear advantage for any specific treatment pattern. With the approval of pomalidomide (POM) by both FDA and EMA, a new benchmark has been set for 3rd line myeloma therapy based on the results of the MM-003 trial [3], while an additional panoply of new myeloma drugs is in late stage clinical development [4], aspiring for registration, or even having accomplished market access, at least in parts of the world (e.g., carfilzomib–CFZ, in the US) [5]. Because an efficacy trial can often overestimate an intervention’s effect when used outside of a clinical trial setting [6]. We decided to the assess real-world evidence for use of all 3rd and later line therapies not comprising POM or CFZ, as documented in the Austrian Myeloma Registry (AMR); www.myeloma.at. On May 21, 2015, the collection and analysis of this type of data was recently been endorsed by the US House Energy & Commerce Committee, voting to pass the latest version of the 21st Century Cures Act [7]. The bill, H.R. 6, released May 19, 2015, encourages greater use of observational studies, patient registries and real-world therapeutic use to support approvals of new drugs and improve post-marketing surveillance. The aim of our analysis was to describe patient characteristics and outcomes, focusing on overall survival and highlighting confounding factors (e.g. length time bias, lead time bias, patient selection, available therapeutic options, etc.). Furthermore, we aimed to describe the broad range of 3rd line and later line treatment options used in myeloma patients in the AMR.

Patients & Methods

The AMR was established in 2008 (comprising retrospective inclusion of patients diagnosed back to the year 2000) under the auspices of the Austrian Society for Hematology & Oncology (OeGHO; www.oegho.at) as a web-based quality control project to document all facets of MM treatment in Austria, focusing the rapid proliferation of “novel agent” based therapies. Bortezomib became widely available in Austria in May 2005, lenalidomide (for 2nd line use in June 2006), while thalidomide has been available from the late nineties as a magistral formula for individual patients. Additionally, some patients received these drugs earlier as participants in clinical trials, named patient- or early access programs. 16.9% of the patients covered in this analysis received therapy in the setting of controlled clinical trials. All MM patients in any line of treatment, from the moment of initiation of a registry participant, are available on the basis of written informed consent. The AMR, collecting data from a representative group of MM centers) delivers a comprehensive picture of current national clinical practice and benchmarks actual MM therapy compared to guideline–based recommendations. Participating centers directly benefit from the AMRs evaluation tool, which allows users to analyze data within their own patient populations. This allows to perform freely combinable parameter defined subgroup analyses. To guarantee highest data security standards, the server is located at a neutral hosting partner (OeKB–BS, www.oekb.at) with secured maintenance service (www.asoluto.com). Automated plausibility checks (e.g. for patient doublets) and regular on-site monitoring assure data quality. Documentation of biologic features allows for the search of MM biomarkers and linkage to a myeloma biobank. All data is stored in a pseudonomized fashion, and all patient records and information are anonymized and de-identified prior to analysis, compatible to national data protection regulations, and the AMR has been approved by all relevant ethical review boards [8]. As of JUN 10th 2014, eleven national and two international myeloma centers actively contribute data to the AMR. (see S1 File). All research projects need a steering committee consent to be performed. For this study, all data records of Austrian patients with at least three fully documented lines of therapy, not comprising POM or CFZ in 3rd line or later, were included. Treatment lines were defined as proposed by the International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) [9] (e.g., induction, autologous transplantation, consolidation, and maintenance constitute one treatment line). All selected data sets were updated by contacting the responsible physician wherever deemed necessary to assure an up-to-date status. Because the definition of myeloma progression [9] depends mostly on serological parameters registry data are thus consequently biased by different surveillance schedules used at different centers, in contrast to clinical trial settings offering a fixed schedule of assessments to determine progresion. This impedes using parameters such as progression-free-survival (PFS), time-to-progression (TTP) and loss-of-remission (LOR) in an analysis of registry data to avoid lead time and/or length time biases. We therefore focused our analysis on overall-survival (OS) and time-to-next-treatment (TNT), which are easier to measure objectively, and in our view clinically more important.

Statistical Analysis

We describe patient characteristics such as gender, age, survival status, and exploratory clinical patient characteristics such as types and number of treatment lines, time to treatment lines, risk factors (e.g., cytogenetics), and overall survival. Cytogenetic risk stratification was based on FISH results with a positivity cut-off of 10% of positive cells to define the occurrence of an aberration. For comparisons between patients receiving three or more lines of therapies and the entire AMR cohort the abbreviations 3SG and AMR were used. Dichotomous variables are expressed as proportions, continuous variables as means with standard deviations (SD), and survival data were analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method [10] and estimated 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for median survival times. In order to make our data comparable to other longitudinal analysis of myeloma treatment outcome, we also report overall survival data stratified by time of diagnosis. For all comparisons, a p-value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. To extrapolate shorter-term follow-up data and estimate comparative long-term survival (at 10 years), a Weibull model was fitted to the survival data.

Results

Patients & lines of therapies (Fig 1)

As of June 10th, 2014, 350 MM patients were documented in the AMR. Out of this cohort, 105 (30%) patients received a 3rd line therapy, while 245 (70%) patients received less than 3 therapeutic regimens. Furthermore, 68 (19.4%) patients received 4th line therapy, 27 (7.7%) received 5th line therapy, and 16 (4.6%) received more than 5 lines of therapy (Fig 1).
Fig 1

Patients and treatment lines.

illustrates the distribution of treatment lines and patients (pts.) documented in the Austrian Myeloma Registry (AMR). Patients who had received at least 3 lines of therapy were included in the analysis (yellow boxes).

Patients and treatment lines.

illustrates the distribution of treatment lines and patients (pts.) documented in the Austrian Myeloma Registry (AMR). Patients who had received at least 3 lines of therapy were included in the analysis (yellow boxes). The median (SD) time from first diagnosis to start of 3rd line therapy was 39 months (23). The median (SD) follow up of the third line subgroup was 48 months (3.9 months) compared to 24 months (3.6 months) in the entire cohort (Fig 1).

Patient Disposition (Tables 1 and 2)

There were 193 (56%) males and 154 (44%) females in the overall cohort. In the 3rd line treatment subgroup (3SG) there were 66 (63%) males and 39 (37%) females. Median (SD) age at first diagnosis was 60.5 years (9.05) in males and 65 years (11.22) in females and 61 years (10.05) in all patients. The median (SD) age of the 3SG group was 62.26 years (10.05), with the median (SD) age of male patients being 62.26 years (9.05) and 62.83 years (11.22) in females. In the AMR cohort, 182 (52%) patients were alive at the time of analysis and 157 (45%) were deceased. Corresponding figures in the 3SG group were 70 (67%) of the patients deceased and 35 (33%) still alive at the time of analysis. a AMR: Austrian Myeloma Registry b 3SG: 3rd line therapy subgroup c SD: standard deviation d pts.: patients e ASCT: Autologous stem cell transplantation f BTZ: bortezomib g IMIiD: immune-modulatory-drug h del17p: deletion17p I t(4;14): translocation (4;14) j mo.: months, a: years k TNT: time to next treatment *—difference due to “lost to follow up”, therapies sum up to > 100% due to combination therapies, n.s.: not significant a N = number b ASCT = autologous stem vell transplantation c BTZ = Bortezomib d = Immunomodulatrory Drug (lenalidomide, thalidomide) e del17p = deletion 17p f t(4;14) = translocation t(4;14) * significant changes Autologous transplantation (ASCT) comprised 30% of 1st or 2nd line treatments for those in the 3SG group (21% in 1st line, 11% in 2nd line) and 31% of 1st or 2nd line treatments in the AMR cohort (22% in 1st line, 9% in 2nd line). A detailed analysis of transplant use over time shows an increase of combined 1st and 2nd line ASCT rates from 35.6% (between 2000–2005), to 50.7% (between 2011–2014). There were 167 (48%) in the AMR cohort and 52 (49%) of patients in the 3SG group who received a BTZ-based 1st line therapy, 87 (33%) in the AMR cohort and 25 (31%) in the 3SG group who received an IMiD based 1st line therapy and 52 (13%) and 15 (12%) patients who received both an IMiD and BTZ in their first line therapies in the AMR and 3SG groups, respectively. There were 62 (48%) in the AMR cohort and 39 (49%) in the 3SG group who received a BTZ-based 2nd line therapy, 70 (54%) in the AMR cohort and 25 (31%) in the 3SG group who received an IMiD based 2nd line therapy and 6 (5%) 2 (1%) received both an IMiD and BTZ in their 2nd line therapies in the AMR cohort and 3SG group, respectively. There were highly significant changes to the use of novel agents over time (see Table 2) where an increase in the use of both bortezomib, lenalidomide and thalidomide, (from 2005 onwards) and their simultaneous use in combination therapies (from 2010 onwards) could be observed.
Table 2

Patient disposition in Multiple Myeloma patients diagnosed 2000–2005, 2006–2010 and 2011–2014.

Diagnosis2000–20052006–20102011–2014
N (%)73 (100.0)136 (100.0)91 (100.0)
Sex male (%)39 (53.4)85 (62.5)51 (56.0)
Sex female (%)34 (46.6)51 (47.5)40 (44.0)
Age +/- SDc at first diagnosis all pts.62 a (+/- 11.7 a)63 a (+/- 12. 4 a)68 a (+/- 12.1 a)
Alive (%)13 (17.8)86 (63.2)74 (81.3)
Dead (%)60 (82.2)50 (36.8)17 (18.7)
Median treatment lines (range)2 (1–5)2 (1–6)3 (1–12)
1st line therapy ASCTb (%)22 (30.1)50 (37.5)34 (37.4)
1st line therapy BTZC based (%)2 (2.7)13 (9.6)*31 (34.1)
1st line therapy IMiDd based (%)40 (54.8)30 (22.1)*3 (3.3)
1st line therapy BTZ & IMiD based (%)3 (4.1)52 (38.2)*62 (68.1)*
1st line therapy other (%)24 (32.9)1 (0.7)*7 (7.7)
2nd line therapy ASCTb (%)4 (5.5)18 (13.2)*17 (18.7)
2nd line therapy BTZc based (%)0 (0.0)21 (15.4)*23 (25.3)
2nd line therapy IMiDd based (%)16 (21.9)44 (32.4)*17 (18.7)
2ndline therapy BTZ & IMiD based (%)8 (11.0)30 (22.1)*18 (19.8)
2ndline therapy other (%)12 (16.4)7 (5.1)10 (11.0)
Cytogenetic very high risk (any)6 (8.2)14 (10.3)12 (18.7)
Cytogenetic very high risk del17pe6 (8.2)9 (6.6)9 (9.9)
Cytogenetic very high risk t(4;14)f0 (0)5 (3.7)3 (3.3)
Cytogenetic very high risk both del17p & t(4;14)0 (0)2 (1.5)1 (1.1)

a N = number

b ASCT = autologous stem vell transplantation

c BTZ = Bortezomib

d = Immunomodulatrory Drug (lenalidomide, thalidomide)

e del17p = deletion 17p

f t(4;14) = translocation t(4;14)

* significant changes

Maintenance and consolidation strategies were used only rarely in both groups and thus not suitable to analysis. No significant differences were seen in treatment patterns of patients receiving a third or -higher line of therapy and those that did not. Cytogenetic very high risk features [11](del 17p, t(4;14), or both) were present in 14% of 3SG patients as compared to 10% in the AMR total population. Time-to-next Treatment (TNT) from 1st to 2nd line was 16.7 +/- 5 mo. in the 3SG patients and 12.5 +/- 9 mo. for all patients TNT from 2nd line to 3rd line was found to be 12.5 months (3SG) and 8.7 months (AMR) respectively.

Survival of MM Patients in Austria 1990–2014 (Fig 2)

Overall survival (OS) from start of 1st line therapy was 70% at 4 years for the entire AMR cohort, compared to 48 months (+/- 26.4 months) for the 3rd line therapy subgroup.

Survival of Multiple Myeloma patients in Austria overtime and extrapolated Weibull model survival estimates.

The upper part (Fig 2A) illustrates the survival of Myeloma patients in Austria respective to the date of their first diagnosis in between 2000–2005 (blue line), 2006–2010 (red line), and 2011–2014 (green line). The x-axis represents time in years, and the y-axis represents the proportion of patients surviving. The dotted lines give the respective Weibull extrapolation of the patients’ 10 years survival. The lower part (Fig 2B) illustrates the survival of Myeloma patients in Austria respective to the date of their first diagnosis in between 2000–2005 (blue line), 2006–2010 (red line), and 2011–2014 (green line). The x-axis represents time in years, and the y-axis represents the proportion of patients surviving. The dotted lines give the respective Weibull extrapolation of the patients’ 10 years survival. To benchmark Austrian treatment results to the international therapeutic landscape as reported in the SEER results [1] we stratified patients according to first diagnosis intervals in between the year 2000 to 2005 (70 patients., 13 [18.6%] alive), 2006 to 2010 (137 patients., 81 [59.1%] alive), 2011 to 2014 (83 patients, 71 [85.5%] alive) and before the year 2000 (20 patients., 2 [10%] alive). An actual median survival (range) was observable for the groups of patients diagnosed before the year 2000 at 9.38 years (7.03–11.72) and for those patients, diagnosed in between 2000 and 2005 at 5.06 years (3.95–6.17), while the cohorts diagnosed 2006–2010 and from 2011 onwards have not yet reached their respective median survival. To better understand the future prognosis of these different patient cohorts a Weibull regression analysis was performed. The projected 10-year survival for the subgroups estimated via a Weibull [12] model, were approximately 21% (diagnosis 2000–2005), 39% (diagnosis 2006–2010) and 56% (diagnosis 2011–2014).

Survival of MM patients in Austria from start of 3rd line therapy (Fig 3)

Median survival after initiation of 3rd line therapy was found to be 27 months (95% CI, 24.25–34.16 months). Maximum (ongoing) survival was found to be 170 months (0–170 months). 70 (67%) of the patients were deceased at the time of analysis and 35 (33%) were still alive. The proportion of patients surviving longer than 2, 3, 4 and 5 years was found to 70%, 64%, 47%, and 30% respectively.

Survival of Multiple Myeloma patients in Austria from start of 3rd line.

Therapy. illustrates the survival of Myeloma patients in Austria from start of 3rd line therapy in 105 patients documented in AMR median survival was found to be 27 months (0–170 months/ongoing).

Austrian Treatment Patterns in 3rd Line Therapy and Beyond

25 stem cell transplantations (SCTs) were used as a salvage modality in 19 (18.1%) patients. These transplants were instituted in a 3rd line setting in 13 (12.4%) patients, 4th line in 9 (8.6%) patients and in 5th line or later in 3 (2.9%) patients. Transplants were autologous in 17 (16.2%) cases and allogeneic in 8 (7.6%) cases SCTs were part of the treatment sequences in all patients surviving over 5 years. Third line therapies were monotherapies in 18%, doublets in 43%, triplets in 36% and other combinations in 3% of cases. 4th line and later therapies were monotherapies in 24%, doublets in 56%, triplets in 13% and other combinations in 7% of cases. Regimens used in 3rd line therapies (105 therapies) contained (adds up to > 100% due to combination therapies): steroids (80 treatments, 76.2%), BTZ (40, 38.1%), experimental agents (EA) (35, 33.3%), LEN (27, 25.7%), classic cytostatic agents (CCA) (15, 14.3%), THAL (8, 7.6%) and bendamustine (BEN) (7, 6.7%). Regimes used in 4th line therapies (68 therapies) contained (adds up to > 100% due to combination therapies): steroids (30, 44.1%), BTZ (26, 38.2%), BEN (14, 20.6%), EA (8, 11.8%), CCA (8, 11.8%), LEN (3, 4.4%), and THAL (2, 2.9%). Median TNT between 3rd and 4th line therapies (TNT3-4) was 29.5 days (52 patients) and 31 days (21 patients) between 4th and 5th line therapies (TNT4-5). Excluding primary refractory patients by IMWG definition (PD under therapy or within 60 days from end of therapy)8 TNT3-4 was 221 days (21 patients) and TNT4-5 was found to be 197 days (9 patients.).

Discussion

This analysis of Austrian myeloma patients’ treatment regimens and outcomes as documented in the AMR confirms the worldwide trend [1] of improving overall survival in this clinical entity over the last decade. The improvement based on the implementation of the first generation of novel agents (BTZ, THAL, LEN) into clinical routine increased median survival to 5.1 years in patients diagnosed between the years 2000 to 2005, and to 5.5 years in patients diagnosed between 2006 to 2010. This compares well with a median OS of 4.6 years for the 2000–2005 cohort and a 6.1 year median OS for the 2006–2010 subgroup reported by Kumar [1] based on the SEER data. In this study there was a small subgroup of patients (20 pts.) diagnosed before the year 2000, but documented in the AMR (initiated ~Jan 1 2008) because they were still alive 8 years later, also showing an excellent median survival of 9.4 years (95% CI, 7.0 to 11.7 years), but very probably this represents a major selection bias as myeloma patients surviving that long, in times of restricted therapeutic options, obviously belonged to a highly favorable biological subgroup. Furthermore, this group of pts. had the unique advantage to be eligible for new highly active “novel agent” based salvage regimes, when these entered clinical practice after 2005. As the number of diagnoses made before the registry was put in practice (2008) cannot be known exactly no conclusion should be drawn from the performance of this small subgroup of patients, but on the predominantly prospectively collected data from the subsequent patient cohorts, we think to be much more informative. Using a Weibull model, we were able to extrapolate 10-year survival probabilities The 10-year survival probability of patients diagnosed between 2011 and 2014 was 56%, which is considered an improved survival rate in an unselected cohort of myeloma patients that has not been seen in previous years. We want to stress the fact that this represents “real-world” evidence collected in a representative, multi-center setting in routine patients, rather than in a highly selected clinical trial population. The continuous improvement in MM survival is accompanied by changing treatment paradigms. From 2005 onwards the use of BTZ and the IMiDs is significantly increasing, while after 2011 their simultaneous use in combination therapies could be observed ever more frequently (see Tables 1 and 2). It seems highly probable that this treatment pattern changes are the basis of the therapeutic progress made in the observation period.
Table 1

Patient disposition in patients receiving or not receiving 3rd line therapy for Multiple myeloma in Austria.

ENTIRE AUSTRIAN MYELOMA REGISTRY COHORTSUBGROUP RECEIVING A 3rd and/or HIGHER LINE THERAPY
AMRa3SGb
N (%)350 (100)105 (100)
Sex male (%)193 (56)66 (63)
Sex female (%)154 (44)39 (37)
Age +/- SDc at first diagnosis all pts.63.86 a +/- 11.82 a62.26 a +/- 10.05
Age +/- SDc at first diagnosis male pts.62.83 a +/- 11.41 a62.83 a +/- 11,22 a
Age +/- SDc at first diagnosis female pts.65.14 a +/- 12.24 a61.79 a +/- 9.05 a
Median follow up24 months +/- 3.6 months48 months +/- 3.9 months
Alive (%)182 (52)35 (33)
Dead (%)157 (45)*70 (67)
Median treatment lines (range)2 (1–12)3 (3–12)
1st line therapy ASCTe (%)77 (22)21 (20)
1st line therapy BTZf based (%)167 (48)52 (49)
1st line therapy IMiDg based (%)87 (33)25 (31)
1st line therapy BTZ & IMiD based (%)52 (13)15 (12)
2nd line therapy ASCTe (%)30 (9)11 (10)
2nd line therapy BTZf based (%)62 (48)39 (50)
2nd line therapy IMiDg based (%)70 (54)25 (31)
2ndline therapy BTZ & IMiD based (%)6 (5)2 (1)
Cytogenetics informative (%)252 (73)71 (68)
Cytogenetics non informative (%)75 (22)26 (25)
Cytogenetic very high risk del17ph24 (7)10 (10)
Cytogenetic very high risk t(4;14)i8 (2)4 (4)
Cytogenetic very high risk both del17p & t(4;14)3 (1)0 (0)
TNTk 1st to 2nd line therapy12.0 months16.7 months, n.s. (p = 0.277)
TNTk 2nd to 3rd line therapy8.7 months12.5 months, n.s. (p = 0.198)

a AMR: Austrian Myeloma Registry

b 3SG: 3rd line therapy subgroup

c SD: standard deviation

d pts.: patients

e ASCT: Autologous stem cell transplantation

f BTZ: bortezomib

g IMIiD: immune-modulatory-drug

h del17p: deletion17p

I t(4;14): translocation (4;14)

j mo.: months, a: years

k TNT: time to next treatment

*—difference due to “lost to follow up”, therapies sum up to > 100% due to combination therapies, n.s.: not significant

The use of autologous transplantation (ASCT) remained more or less constant at ~ 35% of patients in the 1st line setting over the whole period, comparing well to international practice patterns [13], while the use of 2nd line ASCT increased from 5.5% to 18.7% of patients (Table 2). The median age of this myeloma cohort was 63.86 +/- 11.82 years at first diagnosis thus roughly half of them would not qualify for an ASCT using a threshold of 65 years of age widely in use in Europe. As 31% of pts. (22% in 1st line, 9% in 2nd line) received an autologus SCT early and another 25 SCTs were performed in later lines more than half of the eligible patients were actually transplanted. Furthermore, the detailed analysis of transplant use over time shows an increase of combined 1st and 2nd line ASCT rates from 35.6% (200–2005), to 50.7% (2006–2010) and finally 56.1% (2011–2014). This is well in line (actually better) with a recent multinational analysis from 22 countries showing a transplant use of 48% in eligible patients over all lines [14]. In the USA it is well known that ASCT is even more heavily underused and a National Cancer Data Base analysis of [15] 137.409 MM patients diagnosed 1998–2010 found an ASCT rate in 1st line of 12.1% only for the year 2010. In summary ASCT is not comparatively underused in our MM population but quite on the contrary has been applied extensively. In addition, we were able to show promising results in advanced disease outcomes, as defined by start of 3rd line therapy. Median survival from this therapeutic checkpoint was 27 months (0–170 months-ongoing), even without using 2nd generation drugs (POM, CFZ), with a sizeable proportion of patients (about~ 20%) surviving over 5 years. This corroborates the thesis of Bart Barlogie [16] claiming that we already achieve functional cure of Myeloma in a subset of patients. All patients in this “plateau” cohort have received some type of stem cell therapy as part of their salvage regimes, highlighting the importance not to neglect the option of late salvage transplantation, even in times of multiple novel agents being available. Treatments applied in the AMR setting in the 3rd and 4th line plus setting where dominated by combination regimes with a more intensive pattern in 3rd line (more triplets) than in 4th line were therapeutics were mostly used as palliative care. In responding patients TNT in both 3rd and 4th line or higher was ~ 200 days, but patients in this settings should not be taken off therapy for prolonged periods if possible. The patterns of drug use correspond to the national registration status, guidelines [17] and practice with 1st line therapy predominantly BTZ based, 2nd line predominantly LEN based. BTZ-IMiD combinations and experimental agents (33.3% in 3rd line, 11.8% in 4th line) dominated 3rd line combinations. In 4th line, BEN and other cytostatic drugs were frequently combined. The surprisingly overall survival results reported for 3rd line myeloma therapy may, in part, also been influenced by the existence of a subgroup of patients (especially in the 2000–2005 cohort), who did not receive highly effective novel agent based 1st line and/or 2nd line therapies as BTZ, became available in Europe not until May 2005 and LEN has only recently (FEB, 2015) been registered for 1st line use by EMA. These patients may have been more easier to salvage than optimally pretreated patients, although we know that (e.g. long term data from the VISTA trial [18]) the maximum benefit of an optimal induction therapy can never be recovered by a later introduction of effective drugs [19]. The MM-003 trial [3] led to the registration of POM as 3rd line therapy standard, as well as the ASPIRE trial [20] will possibly doing the same thing for CFZ in Europe. MM-003 reported an median OS of 12.7 months with POM-DEX in a randomized phase III setting (with a high dose dexamethasone control arm) and very heavily pretreated pts., while ASPIRE reported a median progression free survival of 26.3 months exploring a combination of CFZ, LEN and DEX (KRd) with the median OS not reached at the time of publication, and Rd being the comparator, in a stricter 3rd defined line setting. The seemingly inferior results of MM-003 to our result of a median OS of 27 months in the AMR cohort, probably is due to the much more stringent inclusion criteria of this study aiming at true double refractory patients. Furthermore, the median number of therapies applied before POM-DEX in the MM03 trial was 5, making it de facto a 6th line study excluding a direct comparison to our 3rd line analysis. On the other hand ASPIRE once more confirms that the relatively best results in Myeloma therapy in suitable patients are achieved with high efficient combinations combining the most active drugs. Despite the principle limitations of observational data, the small numbers in some subgroups, the non-random assignment of treatments applied on the basis of physicians discretion and patients preferences, we think the results noteworthy as the lack of any significant difference in treatment patterns or risk factor distribution between patients in need of advanced therapy lines and those that did not receive such interventions strongly argues against any inherent bias in the selection of patients in the AMR. With data provided in this paper we have set a background on which the now ongoing implementation of further new anti-myeloma drugs in routine care can be monitored for comparative clinical effectiveness. Furthermore, the ongoing linkage of AMR data to Myeloma biobanking and quality of life research will allow to address more refined questions like biomarker identification or questions in Health Technology Assessment (HTA). With the upcoming emergence of additional active anti-myeloma compounds, the perspective to further improve on these results seems bright and perspectives of poor survival in patients with advanced myeloma should be regarded as a thing of the past.

S1 File lists all of AMR centers & coordinating physicians.

(DOC) Click here for additional data file.
  12 in total

1.  Pomalidomide plus low-dose dexamethasone versus high-dose dexamethasone alone for patients with relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma (MM-003): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Jesus San Miguel; Katja Weisel; Philippe Moreau; Martha Lacy; Kevin Song; Michel Delforge; Lionel Karlin; Hartmut Goldschmidt; Anne Banos; Albert Oriol; Adrian Alegre; Christine Chen; Michele Cavo; Laurent Garderet; Valentina Ivanova; Joaquin Martinez-Lopez; Andrew Belch; Antonio Palumbo; Stephen Schey; Pieter Sonneveld; Xin Yu; Lars Sternas; Christian Jacques; Mohamed Zaki; Meletios Dimopoulos
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2013-09-03       Impact factor: 41.316

2.  Use of autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation as initial therapy in multiple myeloma and the impact of socio-geo-demographic factors in the era of novel agents.

Authors:  Mohammed Al-Hamadani; Shahrukh K Hashmi; Ronald S Go
Journal:  Am J Hematol       Date:  2014-05-16       Impact factor: 10.047

3.  Curing myeloma at last: defining criteria and providing the evidence.

Authors:  Bart Barlogie; Alan Mitchell; Frits van Rhee; Joshua Epstein; Gareth J Morgan; John Crowley
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2014-10-07       Impact factor: 22.113

4.  Risk of progression and survival in multiple myeloma relapsing after therapy with IMiDs and bortezomib: a multicenter international myeloma working group study.

Authors:  S K Kumar; J H Lee; J J Lahuerta; G Morgan; P G Richardson; J Crowley; J Haessler; J Feather; A Hoering; P Moreau; X LeLeu; C Hulin; S K Klein; P Sonneveld; D Siegel; J Bladé; H Goldschmidt; S Jagannath; J S Miguel; R Orlowski; A Palumbo; O Sezer; S V Rajkumar; B G M Durie
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2011-07-29       Impact factor: 11.528

5.  Consensus recommendations for the uniform reporting of clinical trials: report of the International Myeloma Workshop Consensus Panel 1.

Authors:  S Vincent Rajkumar; Jean-Luc Harousseau; Brian Durie; Kenneth C Anderson; Meletios Dimopoulos; Robert Kyle; Joan Blade; Paul Richardson; Robert Orlowski; David Siegel; Sundar Jagannath; Thierry Facon; Hervé Avet-Loiseau; Sagar Lonial; Antonio Palumbo; Jeffrey Zonder; Heinz Ludwig; David Vesole; Orhan Sezer; Nikhil C Munshi; Jesus San Miguel
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2011-02-03       Impact factor: 22.113

Review 6.  Personalized therapy in multiple myeloma according to patient age and vulnerability: a report of the European Myeloma Network (EMN).

Authors:  Antonio Palumbo; Sara Bringhen; Heinz Ludwig; Meletios A Dimopoulos; Joan Bladé; Maria V Mateos; Laura Rosiñol; Mario Boccadoro; Michele Cavo; Henk Lokhorst; Sonja Zweegman; Evangelos Terpos; Faith Davies; Christoph Driessen; Peter Gimsing; Martin Gramatzki; Roman Hàjek; Hans E Johnsen; Fernando Leal Da Costa; Orhan Sezer; Andrew Spencer; Meral Beksac; Gareth Morgan; Hermann Einsele; Jesus F San Miguel; Pieter Sonneveld
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2011-08-12       Impact factor: 22.113

7.  Carfilzomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone for relapsed multiple myeloma.

Authors:  A Keith Stewart; S Vincent Rajkumar; Meletios A Dimopoulos; Tamás Masszi; Ivan Špička; Albert Oriol; Roman Hájek; Laura Rosiñol; David S Siegel; Georgi G Mihaylov; Vesselina Goranova-Marinova; Péter Rajnics; Aleksandr Suvorov; Ruben Niesvizky; Andrzej J Jakubowiak; Jesus F San-Miguel; Heinz Ludwig; Michael Wang; Vladimír Maisnar; Jiri Minarik; William I Bensinger; Maria-Victoria Mateos; Dina Ben-Yehuda; Vishal Kukreti; Naseem Zojwalla; Margaret E Tonda; Xinqun Yang; Biao Xing; Philippe Moreau; Antonio Palumbo
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-12-06       Impact factor: 91.245

8.  A phase 2 study of single-agent carfilzomib (PX-171-003-A1) in patients with relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma.

Authors:  David S Siegel; Thomas Martin; Michael Wang; Ravi Vij; Andrzej J Jakubowiak; Sagar Lonial; Suzanne Trudel; Vishal Kukreti; Nizar Bahlis; Melissa Alsina; Asher Chanan-Khan; Francis Buadi; Frederic J Reu; George Somlo; Jeffrey Zonder; Kevin Song; A Keith Stewart; Edward Stadtmauer; Lori Kunkel; Sandra Wear; Alvin F Wong; Robert Z Orlowski; Sundar Jagannath
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2012-07-25       Impact factor: 22.113

Review 9.  IMWG consensus on risk stratification in multiple myeloma.

Authors:  W J Chng; A Dispenzieri; C-S Chim; R Fonseca; H Goldschmidt; S Lentzsch; N Munshi; A Palumbo; J S Miguel; P Sonneveld; M Cavo; S Usmani; B G M Durie; H Avet-Loiseau
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2013-08-26       Impact factor: 11.528

10.  A primer on effectiveness and efficacy trials.

Authors:  Amit G Singal; Peter D R Higgins; Akbar K Waljee
Journal:  Clin Transl Gastroenterol       Date:  2014-01-02       Impact factor: 4.488

View more
  8 in total

1.  Trends in overall survival and costs of multiple myeloma, 2000-2014.

Authors:  R Fonseca; S Abouzaid; M Bonafede; Q Cai; K Parikh; L Cosler; P Richardson
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2016-12-23       Impact factor: 11.528

2.  Impact of prior therapy on the efficacy and safety of oral ixazomib-lenalidomide-dexamethasone vs. placebo-lenalidomide-dexamethasone in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma in TOURMALINE-MM1.

Authors:  María-Victoria Mateos; Tamas Masszi; Norbert Grzasko; Markus Hansson; Irwindeep Sandhu; Ludek Pour; Luísa Viterbo; Sharon R Jackson; Anne-Marie Stoppa; Peter Gimsing; Mehdi Hamadani; Gabriela Borsaru; Deborah Berg; Jianchang Lin; Alessandra Di Bacco; Helgi van de Velde; Paul G Richardson; Philippe Moreau
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2017-07-27       Impact factor: 9.941

3.  Real-world treatment outcomes in multiple myeloma: Multicenter registry results from Finland 2009-2013.

Authors:  Kari Remes; Pekka Anttila; Raija Silvennoinen; Mervi Putkonen; Hanna Ollikainen; Venla Terävä; Marjatta Sinisalo; Kristiina Kananen; Frida Schain; Päivi Castren-Kortegangas; Tiina M Järvinen; Marta Pisini; Felix Wahl; Tricia Dixon; Amy Leval
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-12-05       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Long-term Outcomes in Patients With Multiple Myeloma: A Retrospective Analysis of the Dutch Population-based HAematological Registry for Observational Studies (PHAROS).

Authors:  Silvia G R Verelst; Hedwig M Blommestein; Saskia De Groot; Sebastian Gonzalez-McQuire; Lucy DeCosta; Johan B de Raad; Carin A Uyl-de Groot; Pieter Sonneveld
Journal:  Hemasphere       Date:  2018-05-04

5.  Oral ixazomib-dexamethasone vs oral pomalidomide-dexamethasone for lenalidomide-refractory, proteasome inhibitor-exposed multiple myeloma: a randomized Phase 2 trial.

Authors:  Meletios A Dimopoulos; Fredrik Schjesvold; Vadim Doronin; Olga Vinogradova; Hang Quach; Xavier Leleu; Yolanda Gonzalez Montes; Karthik Ramasamy; Alessandra Pompa; Mark-David Levin; Cindy Lee; Ulf Henrik Mellqvist; Roland Fenk; Hélène Demarquette; Hamdi Sati; Alexander Vorog; Richard Labotka; Jichang Du; Mohamed Darif; Shaji Kumar
Journal:  Blood Cancer J       Date:  2022-01-24       Impact factor: 11.037

6.  Temporal Trends in Survival and Healthcare Costs in Patients with Multiple Myeloma in the United States.

Authors:  Eric M Maiese; Kristin A Evans; Bong-Chul Chu; Debra E Irwin
Journal:  Am Health Drug Benefits       Date:  2018-02

Review 7.  New developments in the management of relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma - the role of ixazomib.

Authors:  Paul G Richardson; Shaji Kumar; Jacob P Laubach; Claudia Paba-Prada; Neeraj Gupta; Deborah Berg; Helgi van de Velde; Philippe Moreau
Journal:  J Blood Med       Date:  2017-08-22

Review 8.  Pixantrone demonstrates significant in vitro activity against multiple myeloma and plasma cell leukemia.

Authors:  Ella Willenbacher; Karin Jöhrer; Wolfgang Willenbacher; Brigitte Flögel; Richard Greil; Brigitte Kircher
Journal:  Ann Hematol       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 3.673

  8 in total

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