| Literature DB >> 28919633 |
S Sidana1, N Tandon1, A Dispenzieri1, M A Gertz1, F K Buadi1, M Q Lacy1, D Dingli1, A L Fonder1, S R Hayman1, M A Hobbs1, W I Gonsalves1, Y L Hwa1, P Kapoor1, R A Kyle1, N Leung1,2, R S Go1, J A Lust1, S J Russell1, S R Zeldenrust1, S V Rajkumar1, S K Kumar1.
Abstract
Hematologic response criteria in light chain (AL) amyloidosis require the difference in involved and uninvolved free light chains (dFLC) to be at least 5 mg/dl. We describe the clinical presentation and outcomes of newly diagnosed amyloidosis patients with dFLC <5 mg/dl (non-evaluable dFLC; 14%, n=165) compared with patients with dFLC ⩾5 mg/dl (evaluable dFLC; 86%, n=975). Patients with non-evaluable dFLC had less cardiac involvement (40% vs 80%, P<0.001), less liver involvement (11% vs 17%, P=0.04) and a trend toward less gastrointestinal involvement (18% vs 25%, P=0.08). However, significantly higher renal involvement (72% vs 56%, P=0.0002) was observed in the non-evaluable dFLC cohort. Differences in treatment patterns were observed, with 51% of treated patients undergoing upfront stem cell transplantation in the non-evaluable cohort compared with 28% in the evaluable dFLC group (P<0.001). Progression-free survival (61 vs 13 months, P<0.001) and overall survival (OS; 101 vs 29 months, P<0.001) were significantly longer in the non-evaluable dFLC cohort. Normalization of involved light chain levels and decrease in dFLC <1 mg/dl (baseline at least 2 mg/dl) were predictive of OS and associated with better dialysis-free survival and may be used for response assessment in patients with non-evaluable FLC levels.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28919633 DOI: 10.1038/leu.2017.286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528