| Literature DB >> 28126960 |
Verónica González-Calle1, Seila Cerdá2, Jorge Labrador3, Eduardo Sobejano1, Beatriz González-Mena4, Carmen Aguilera5, Enrique María Ocio1, María Belén Vidriales1, Noemí Puig1, Norma Carmen Gutiérrez1, Ramón García-Sanz1, José María Alonso6, Rosa López7, Carlos Aguilar8, Alfonso García de Coca9, Roberto Hernández10, José Mariano Hernández11, Fernando Escalante2, María-Victoria Mateos12.
Abstract
Immunoparesis or suppression of polyclonal immunoglobulins is a very common condition in newly diagnosed myeloma patients. However, the recovery of polyclonal immunoglobulins in the setting of immune reconstitution after autologous stem cell transplantation and its effect on outcome has not yet been explored. We conducted this study in a cohort of 295 patients who had undergone autologous transplantation. In order to explore the potential role of immunoglubulin recovery as a dynamic predictor of progression or survival after transplantation, conditional probabilities of progression-free survival and overall survival were estimated according to immunoglobulin recovery at different time points using a landmark approach. One year after transplant, when B-cell reconstitution is expected to be completed, among 169 patients alive and progression free, 88 patients (52%) showed immunoglobulin recovery and 81 (48%) did not. Interestingly, the group with immunoglobulin recovery had a significantly longer median progression-free survival than the group with persistent immunoparesis (median 60.4 vs. 27.9 months, respectively; Hazard Ratio: 0.45, 95%Confidence Interval: 0.31-0.66; P<0.001), and improved overall survival (11.3 vs. 7.3 years; Hazard Ratio: 0.45, 95%Confidence Interval: 0.27-0.74; P=0.002). Furthermore, the percentage of normal plasma cells detected by flow cytometry in the bone marrow assessed at day 100 after transplantation was associated with the immunoglobulin recovery at that time and may predict immunoglobulin recovery in the subsequent months: nine months and one year. In conclusion, the recovery of polyclonal immunoglobulins one year after autologous transplantation in myeloma patients is an independent long-term predictor marker for progression and survival. Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28126960 PMCID: PMC5477611 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2016.158345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941
Figure 1.Kinetics of the polyclonal immunoglobulin (Ig) recovery after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) in 295 myeloma patients (1993–2014). A total of 295 patients were included in the study, after excluding 47 patients who underwent tandem auto-alloSCT or those who were lost to follow up before day +100. Evaluable patients with available Igs at each time during the study are represented on the right. The gray box on the right shows the number of patients who had recovered polyclonal Igs by the different times since ASCT (center boxes). The proportion of patients with Ig recovery increases over time, indicating progressive Ig recovery after ASCT (represented by the descending black arrow) among the evaluable patients. Some patients did not have available Igs at various times (data not shown): 20 patients at 100 days (d); 71 at six months (mo); 71 at nine mo; 62 at one year (yr); 55 at two years; 60 at three years; and 57 patients at five years. The cumulative numbers of patients who had progressed or died at each time point, and who were therefore excluded from the Ig evaluation, are shown on the left.
Baseline characteristics of 295 transplant-eligible myeloma patients and treatments received before and after autologous stem cell transplant (1993–2014).
Distribution of baseline and disease characteristics by immunoglobulin recovery status 100 days and one year after autologous stem cell transplantation (n=263 and n=169).
Figure 2.Box plots illustrating the association between total percentage of normal plasma cells (nPCs) in the bone marrow (BM) flow assessment at 100 days and subsequent immunoglobulin (Ig) recovery nine months (A) and one year (B) after transplantation. (A) Box plots showing the distribution of nPCs in the BM assessment 100 days by Ig recovery after nine months. Note that the group who recovered polyclonal Igs after nine months (left) had shown a significantly higher median percentage of nPCs in the previous BM assessment at 100 days: 0.11% versus 0.06%. (B) Box plots showing the distribution of nPCs after 100 days in the Ig recovery groups after one year. Patients who had recovered polyclonal Igs by one year after transplantation also had shown higher median percentages of nPCs at 100 days: 0.10% versus 0.08% nPCs, respectively. Therefore, the quantity of nPCs in the BM assessment after 100 days can predict subsequent Ig recovery after transplantation.
Figure 3.Kaplan-Meier curves for conditional progression-free survival (PFS) from the landmark time point of one year after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) according to immunoglobulin (Ig) recovery. Estimated probability of PFS conditional on being alive and progression-free one year after ASCT, according to Ig recovery at this landmark time point (represented with a vertical line intersecting 12 months). There were 169 patients at risk, indicated below the figure, corresponding to those alive, progression-free and not censored at this landmark time point; 88 of 169 had Ig recovery and a median PFS significantly longer than those 81 patients who had not recovered Ig at this landmark time point. mo.: months; OS: overall survival; HR: hazard ratio.
Figure 4.Kaplan-Meier curves for conditional progression-free survival (PFS) from the landmark time point of one year according to timing of immunoglobulin (Ig) recovery within the first year after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Again, the probability of PFS was estimated by restricting to patients who were alive and progression-free one year after ASCT, according to the Ig recovery period. Group 1 recovered Ig before six months since ASCT, group 2 between 6–12 months after ASCT, and Group 3 had not recovered Ig at one year. Median PFS was longer for the first group, who had an earlier Ig recovery. mo.: months; OS: overall survival; HR: Hazard Ratio.
Figure 5.Kaplan-Meier curves for conditional overall survival (OS) from the landmark time point of one year after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) according to immunoglobulin (Ig) recovery. Estimated probability of survival given that a patient has already survived or was not censored at one year after ASCT according to the Ig recovery. Median OS for the group with Ig recovery at this landmark time point was significantly longer than the median OS for the 81 patients without Ig recovery. yrs.: years; CI: Confidence Interval; HR: hazard ratio.
Univariate and multivariate analysis of covariates affecting progression-free survival and overall survival by conditional version of the Cox regression model for the one year landmark point.