Literature DB >> 27641057

Serum free immunoglobulin light chain fingerprint identifies a subset of newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients with worse outcome.

Irit Avivi1, Yael C Cohen1, Erel Joffe1, Noam Benyamini2, Viki Held-Kuznetsov2, Svetlana Trestman1, Evangelos Terpos3, Meletios A Dimopoulos3, Efstathios Kastritis3.   

Abstract

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a multi-subclonal malignancy with relatively high heterogeneity. Patients who initially presented with both monoclonal-protein (MP) and free light chain (FLC) secretion but then relapsed with a light chain escape pattern have been shown to reflect disease clonal evolution and to bare a worse prognosis. We hypothesized that a discordant MP/FLC pattern at diagnosis may reflect a similar clonal evolution that had occurred prior to diagnosis of active myeloma, conferring a worse outcome. We analyzed 255 consecutive newly diagnosed MM patients who received first line bortezomib-based therapy between 2007 and 2014, hypothesizing that their MP/FLC fingerprint at diagnosis reflects clonal heterogeneity and, therefore, affects outcome. An involved FLC level ≥ 700 mg/L and MP ≥ 2.5 g/L were used as cutoffs for low vs high FLC and MP levels, respectively. Patients were divided into 4 subgroups according to their involved FLC and MP blood levels at diagnosis: HiLC and HiMP for patients with either a predominant FLC or a predominant MP, respectively, and HiLC-MP and LoLC-MP when both FLC and MP were increased or decreased, respectively. There were 68 (27%) patients with HiLC, which presented more often with International Staging System-3 stage (P < .0001). Multivariate analysis showed that HiLC was associated with a 5.1-fold risk for mortality in a multivariate model (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.34-19.68). Both HiLC and HiLC-MP phenotypes were associated with shorter progression-free survival (hazard ratio of 2.66 [95% CI, 1.33-5.32] and 2.82 [95% CI, 1.37-5.83], respectively), independently of other prognostic factors, including the use of autograft. Thus, we identified an LC predominant secretory fingerprint (HiLC phenotype) at diagnosis as a potential independent risk factor that may affect disease control and survival in newly diagnosed MM patients treated with bortezomib-based induction therapy; this may represent increased subclonal heterogeneity.
Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  light chain; myeloma; prognosis; secretory

Mesh:

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27641057     DOI: 10.1002/hon.2336

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hematol Oncol        ISSN: 0278-0232            Impact factor:   5.271


  2 in total

1.  Successful treatment of patients with newly diagnosed/untreated light chain multiple myeloma with a combination of bendamustine, prednisone and bortezomib (BPV).

Authors:  Hannah Tessenow; Madlen Holzvogt; Bruno Holzvogt; Marc Andrea; Simone Heyn; Thomas Schliwa; Maik Schwarz; Thomas Zehrfeld; Cornelia Becker; Christian Pfrepper; Georg Nikolaus Franke; Rainer Krahl; Madlen Jentzsch; Sabine Leiblein; Sebastian Schwind; Marius Bill; Vladan Vucinic; Thoralf Lange; Dietger Niederwieser; Wolfram Pönisch
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-05-22       Impact factor: 4.553

2.  Prognostic impact of rapid reduction of involved free light chains in multiple myeloma patients under first-line treatment with Bendamustine, Prednisone, and Bortezomib (BPV).

Authors:  Tanja Holzhey; Wolfram Pönisch; Song-Yau Wang; Madlen Holzvogt; Bruno Holzvogt; Marc Andrea; Thomas Zehrfeld; Doreen Hammerschmidt; Franz Albert Hoffmann; Cornelia Becker; Andreas Schwarzer; Maik Schwarz; Uta Schönfelder-Fricke; Thomas Edelmann; Leanthe Braunert; Georg-Nikolaus Franke; Madlen Jentzsch; Sebastian Schwind; Markus Bill; Juliane Grimm; Yvonne Remane; Uwe Platzbecker; Markus Scholz
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2021-01-12       Impact factor: 4.553

  2 in total

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