| Literature DB >> 29282899 |
Nicola Lehners1,2, Natalia Becker3, Axel Benner3, Maria Pritsch1, Martin Löpprich1,4, Elias Karl Mai1, Jens Hillengass1, Hartmut Goldschmidt1,5, Marc-Steffen Raab1,2.
Abstract
The widespread use of high-dose therapy and autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) as well as the introduction of novel agents have significantly improved outcomes in multiple myeloma (MM) enabling long-term survival. We here analyze factors influencing survival in 865 newly diagnosed MM patients who underwent first-line ASCT at our center between 1993 and 2014. Relative survival and conditional survival were assessed to further characterize long-term survivors. Achievement of complete response (CR) post-ASCT was associated with prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) in the whole cohort and with significantly superior overall survival (OS) in the subgroup of patients receiving novel agent-based induction therapy. Landmark analyses performed at 1, 3, and 5 years post-ASCT revealed that sustainment of any response had a highly significant influence on survival with no significant differences between sustained CR and sustained inferior responses. Furthermore, outcome was independently improved by administration of maintenance therapy. A subset of patients did experience long-term survival >15 years. However, conditional survival demonstrated a persistent risk of myeloma-associated death and cumulative relative survival curves did not show development of a clear plateau, even in prognostically advantageous groups. In conclusion, in this large retrospective study, sustained response after first-line ASCT was found to be a major prognostic factor for OS independent of depth of sustained response. Administration of maintenance therapy further improved outcome, supporting the hypothesis that interventions to prolong responses achieved post-ASCT may be essential to reach long-term survival, especially in the setting of persisting residual disease.Entities:
Keywords: Autologous transplantation; maintenance therapy; multiple myeloma; risk factors; survival analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29282899 PMCID: PMC5806105 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.1283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Patients’ characteristics
| Patient cohort | |
|---|---|
| Median age [range] | 56.6 years [24–74 years] |
| Sex | |
| Male | 509 (58.8%) |
| Female | 356 (41.2%) |
| MM type | |
| IgG | 486 (58.8%) |
| IgA | 174 (21.1%) |
| IgD | 16 (1.9%) |
| IgM | 1 (0.1%) |
| Bence‐Jones | 150 (18.2%) |
| double gammopathy (IgG + IgA) | 1 (0.1%) |
| asecretory | 36 (4.2%) |
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| ISS stage | |
| 1 | 249 (45.7%) |
| 2 | 169 (31.0%) |
| 3 | 127 (23.3%) |
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| Creatinine | |
| <2 mg/dL | 743 (86.2%) |
| ≥2 mg/dL | 119 (13.8%) |
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| Hemoglobin | |
| <10 g/dL | 233 (29.7%) |
| ≥10 g/dL | 551 (70.3%) |
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| Thrombocytes | |
| <150.000/ | 75 (10.4%) |
| ≥150.000/ | 646 (89.6%) |
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| Lactate dehydrogenase | |
| ≤upper limit of normal | 547 (82.1%) |
| >upper limit of normal | 119 (17.9%) |
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| Median | 3.0 mg/L [2.1–4.8] |
| Median serum albumin | 40.8 g/L [35.5–44.6] |
| Induction therapy | |
| Novel agent‐based | 358 (41.7%) |
| Conventional | 500 (58.3%) |
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| Maintenance therapy | |
| No maintenance | 371 (49.0%) |
| interferon | 265 (35.0%) |
| thalidomide | 84 (11.1%) |
| other | 37 (4.9%) |
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|
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| Single/Tandem ASCT | |
| Single ASCT | 607 (70.2%) |
| Tandem ASCT | 258 (29.8%) |
| Year of ASCT | |
| 1992–1995 | 39 (4.5%) |
| 1996–2000 | 182 (21.0%) |
| 2001–2005 | 178 (20.6%) |
| 2006–2010 | 305 (35.3%) |
| 2011–2014 | 161 (18.6%) |
| Median time from diagnosis to first ASCT | 6.6 months [5.5–8.4] |
| Response after ASCT (EBMT) | |
| Complete response | 76 (9.4%) |
| Partial response | 652 (80.7%) |
| Minor response | 34 (4.2%) |
| Stable disease | 10 (1.2%) |
| Progressive disease | 36 (4.5%) |
| Response after ASCT (IMWG) | |
| Complete response | 15 (3.7%) |
| Near complete response | 152 (37.4%) |
| Very good partial response | 89 (21.9%) |
| Partial response | 120 (29.5%) |
| Minor response | 12 (3.0%) |
| Stable disease | 5 (1.2%) |
| Progressive disease | 14 (3.4%) |
Laboratory values assessed at time of diagnosis. For serum β2‐microglobulin, serum albumin and time from diagnosis to first ASCT median as well as first and third quartiles are given.
Multivariate analysis of possible influence factors on PFS and OS
| Factor | PFS | OS | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95% CI) |
| HR (95% CI) |
| |
| Age | 1.15 (1.04; 1.28) |
| 1.35 (1.17;1.56) |
|
| Year of ASCT | 1.01 (0.99; 1.03) | 0.24 | 1.02 (0.99;1.05) | 0.21 |
| MM type (reference: IgG) | ||||
| IgA | 1.06 (0.84; 1.34) | 0.61 | 1.02 (0.77;1.36) | 0.89 |
| IgD | 0.70 (0.28; 1.72) | 0.44 | 0.93 (0.34;2.55) | 0.89 |
| Bence‐Jones | 1.05 (0.83; 1.33) | 0.67 | 1.00 (0.74;1.35) | 0.99 |
| ISS stage (reference: 1) | ||||
| 2 | 1.05 (0.84; 1.30) | 0.69 | 1.04 (0.79;1.35) | 0.80 |
| 3 | 1.30 (0.98; 1.73) | 0.07 | 1.34 (0.94;1.91) | 0.10 |
| Laboratory values at diagnosis | ||||
| Hemoglobin < 10 g/dL | 1.09 (0.87; 1.37) | 0.48 | 0.92 (0.69;1.24) | 0.60 |
| Thrombocytes < 150.000/ | 1.48 (1.07; 2.04) |
| 1.67 (1.10;2.52) |
|
| Creatinine ≥ 2 mg/dL | 0.99 (0.72; 1.38) | 0.97 | 1.32 (0.89;1.96) | 0.17 |
| LDH > upper limit of normal | 1.11 (0.87; 1.43) | 0.40 | 1.28 (0.94;1.74) | 0.11 |
| CR after ASCT | 0.69 (0.52; 0.93) |
| 0.82 (0.57;1.17) | 0.27 |
| Novel agent‐based induction | 0.58 (0.45; 0.74) |
| 0.48 (0.35;0.67) |
|
| Tandem ASCT | 0.93 (0.75; 1.14) | 0.46 | 0.80 (0.61;1.04) | 0.10 |
| Maintenance therapy | 0.53 (0.42; 0.65) |
| 0.48 (0.37;0.63) |
|
Figure 1Landmark analyses at 3‐years (A) and 5‐years (B) after ASCT. Patients are stratified by sustained complete response (sustained CR), sustained inferior response (sustained non‐CR), lost CR and lost inferior response (lost non‐CR).
Figure 2Multivariate analysis of possible influence factors on survival at 3‐year landmark. Hazard ratio (HR), 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) as well as P‐values are given.
Figure 33‐year conditional survival for the entire patient cohort.
Figure 4Absolute and relative survival for the entire patient cohort (A) as well as relative survival stratified by sustained response (at 3‐year landmark) (B).