| Literature DB >> 30368589 |
Carolina Marini1, Tânia Maia2, Rui Bergantim2,3, Jorge Pires2, Eliana Aguiar2, José Eduardo Guimarães2,3, Fernanda Trigo2.
Abstract
Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) is still debatable in treatment of patients over 65 years with multiple myeloma (MM). We performed a retrospective analysis of newly diagnosed MM patients who underwent ASCT between January 2010 and July 2016. A non-transplanted group with similar clinical characteristics, aged 65-70 years old, diagnosed and treated in the same timeline was used for comparison. We analyzed a total of 155 patients, 132 of which underwent ASCT (≤ 65 years, n = 103, median 56 years; > 65 years, n = 29, median 67 years) and 23 non-transplanted (median 68 years). Conditioning consisted of melphalan 200 mg/m2 (MEL200) in younger patients and melphalan 140 mg/m2 (MEL140) in half of elderly patients. Stratifying by age, there were no statistically significant differences concerning transplant-related myelotoxicity and non-hematopoietic toxicity; however, elderly patients conditioned with MEL200 had higher needs of transfusional support and more days of intravenous antibiotics. Those patients also had higher needs of transfusional support, higher grade of mucositis (p = 0.028), and more days of intravenous antibiotics (p = 0.019) than the elderly transplanted with MEL140. Global transplant-related mortality was 3.8%. Survival was not influenced by age. Non-transplanted elderly patients had comparable disease features, and induction response was similar in both groups (before ASCT in the transplanted cohort). Survival of transplanted elderly patients was superior to non-transplanted (OS, 59 months vs 30 months, p = 0.037; EFS, 45 months vs 27 months, p = 0.014). Selected elderly patients when transplanted have similar disease response and survival as younger patients. A higher dose of melphalan has more toxicity, but it is globally a well-tolerated procedure.Entities:
Keywords: Autologous transplantation; Elderly; Multiple myeloma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30368589 PMCID: PMC6342895 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-018-3528-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Demographics and disease classification at diagnosis
| ≤ 65 years old | ASCT > 65 years old | No ASCT ≥ 65 years old | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis, years (median) | 56 (36; 65) | 67 (64; 70) | 68 (65; 70) |
| Age at transplant, years (median) | 56 (37; 65) | 68 (66; 70) | NA |
| Gender | |||
| Male ( | 51 (49%) | 21 (72%) | 11 (48%) |
| Female ( | 52 (51%) | 8 (28%) | 12 (52%) |
| Performance status | |||
| ECOG | |||
| ≤ 2 ( | 103 (100%) | 29 (100%) | 19 (82%) |
| > 2 ( | 0 | 0 | 4 (18%) |
| Charlson score | |||
| 1–2 ( | 86 (83%) | 18 (62%) | 7 (30%) |
| 3–4 ( | 16 (16%) | 10 (35%) | 11 (48%) |
| ≥ 5 ( | 1 (1%) | 1 (3%) | 5 (22%) |
| CRAB | |||
| Calcium > 2.75 mmol/L ( | 15 (15%) | 5 (18%) | 3 (13%) |
| Creatinine > 2 mg/dL ( | 11 (11%) | 4 (16%) | 10 (43%) |
| Hemoglobin < 10 g/dL ( | 38 (37%) | 9 (31%) | 12 (52%) |
| Bone disease ( | 74 (71%) | 21 (72%) | 12 (66%) |
| B2MICRO > 3.5 mg/L ( | 40 (43%) | 14 (54%) | 14 (88%) |
| Monoclonal component | |||
| IgG ( | 54 (52%) | 13 (45%) | 11 (48%) |
| IgA ( | 19 (18%) | 11 (38%) | 6 (26%) |
| Light chains only ( | 18 (17%) | 4 (14%) | 6 (26%) |
| Other ( | 12 (13%) | 1 (3%) | 0 |
| Staging ISS | |||
| I ( | 39 (38%) | 7 (24%) | 3 (13%) |
| II ( | 32 (31%) | 10 (35%) | 4 (17%) |
| III ( | 26 (25%) | 10 (35%) | 13 (56%) |
| Unknown ( | 6 (6%) | 2 (6%) | 3 (14%) |
| Cytogenetic risk | |||
| Standard ( | 30 (29%) | 11 (38%) | 4 (17%) |
| Intermediate ( | 24 (23%) | 5 (17%) | 10 (43%) |
| High ( | 12 (12%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (9%) |
| Unknown ( | 37 (36%) | 11 (38%) | 7 (31%) |
| BM plasma cells (median) | 18 (0; 80) | 10 (0.5; 80) | 15 (1; 86) |
Charlson score is calculated at time of diagnosis; CRAB is acronym for calcium, renal, anemia, bone, for clinical classification of MM [28]; BM plasma cells is median percentage of plasma cells in bone marrow at diagnosis, by immunophenotype. Cytogenetic risk is defined by Mayo Stratification of Myeloma and Risk Adapted Therapy consensus guidelines 2013 (mSMART) [29]
Therapy characteristics and response to induction therapy
| ≤ 65 years old | ASCT > 65 years old | No ASCT ≥ 65 years old | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Induction chemotherapy | |||
| Bortezomib-based ( | 71 (69%) | 22 (76%) | 15 (65%) |
| IMiD-based ( | 3 (3%) | 3 (10%) | 4 (17%) |
| Bortezomib + IMiDs ( | 27 (26%) | 4 (14%) | 3 (13%) |
| Neither ( | 2 (2%) | 0 | 1 (5%) |
| Response to therapy | |||
| CR ( | 29 (28%) | 7 (24%) | 8 (35%) |
| VGPR ( | 46 (45%) | 13 (45%) | 7 (30%) |
| PR ( | 27 (26%) | 9 (31%) | 5 (22%) |
| Refractory/stable ( | 1 (1%) | 0 | 3 (13%) |
| > 2 lines of treatment for better response ( | 13 (12%) | 6 (21%) | 3 (13%) |
| Time to transplant (median months) | 8 (3; 21) | 9 (4; 20) | NA |
| Mobilization regimen | |||
| HD-Cy + GCSF ( | 78 (76%) | 25 (86%) | NA |
| G-CSF only ( | 25 (24%) | 4 (14%) | NA |
| CD34+ collected (median × 106/kg) | 6.5 (2.2; 35) | 5.0 (1.6; 19) | NA |
| Number of apheresis ≥ 3 | 23 (22%) | 8 (27%) | NA |
IMiDs, immunomodulatory drugs; HD-Cy, high-dose cyclophosphamide; G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor
Transplant-related toxicity by age, the dose of melphalan and in the elderly group
| ≤ 65 vs > 65 | > 65: rMEL vs MEL200 | MEL200: ≤ 65 vs > 65 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Myelotoxicity | |||
| Aplasia (median days) | 12 vs 12 ( | 12 vs 11 ( | 12 vs 11 ( |
| PLT recovery (median days) | 12 vs 12 ( | 12 vs 12 ( | 12 vs 12 ( |
| PLT support (median units) | 1 vs 2 ( | 1 vs 2 ( | 1 vs 2 ( |
| RBC support (median units) | 0 vs 0.5 ( | 0 vs 1 ( | 0 vs 1 ( |
| Non-hematopoietic toxicity—infection | |||
| Fever (median days) | 2 vs 2 ( | 1 vs 2 ( | 2 vs 2 ( |
| CRP (median mg/L) | 147 vs 139 ( | 156 vs 129 ( | 145 vs 129 ( |
| Antibiotics (median number) | 2 vs 2 ( | 1 vs 2 ( | 2 vs 2 ( |
| Antibiotics (median days) | 9 vs 7 ( | 7 vs 11 ( | 9 vs 11 ( |
| Non-hematopoietic toxicity—mucositis | |||
| Grade (median) | III vs III ( | II vs III ( | III vs III ( |
| IV morphine (% who need) | 55% vs 41% ( | 28% vs 63% ( | 56% vs 63% ( |
| IV morphine (median days) | 3 vs 0 ( | 0 vs 3 ( | 3 vs 3 ( |
Complications in elderly patients, transplanted or not
| ASCT > 65 years old | No ASCT ≥ 65 years old | |
|---|---|---|
| Median number of complications in 1 year | 4 (0; 6) | 2 (0; 7) |
| Median number of inpatient days due to complications | 8 (0; 50) | 0 (0; 53) |
| Type of complications by number of patients | ||
| Neuropathy ( | 9 (31%) | 5 (22%) |
| Thrombotic ( | 2 (7%) | 3 (13%) |
| Hemorrhagic ( | 2 (7%) | 1 (4%) |
| Infection ( | 28 (96%) | 17 (74%) |
| Mucositis ( | 24 (82%) | 0 |
| Others ( | 5 (17%) | 9 (39%) |
| Grade of complications by number of events | ||
| Number of events ( | 102 | 55 |
| Grade 1–2 ( | 54 (53%) | 42 (76%) |
| Grade 3–4 ( | 48 (47%) | 13 (24%) |
In the type of complications, the category “Others” includes cardiac, hepatic, endocrine, and cutaneous toxicities
Conditioning and outcome after transplant
| ≤ 65 years old | ASCT > 65 years old | No ASCT ≥ 65 years old | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conditioning | |||
| MEL200 ( | 101 (98%) | 11 (38%) | NA |
| MEL140 ( | 2 (2%) | 15 (52%) | NA |
| MEL100 ( | 0 | 3 (10%) | NA |
| Response at day 100 | |||
| CR (%) | 50 (49%) | 17 (59%) | NA |
| VGPR (%) | 39 (38%) | 6 (21%) | NA |
| PR (%) | 10 (9%) | 4 (14%) | NA |
| Refractory/stable (%) | 1 (1%) | 0 | NA |
| Death at day 100 (%) | 3 (3%) | 2 (6%) | NA |
| Mortality ( | 21 (19%) | 10 (34%) | 13 (56%) |
| MM progression ( | 20 | 7 | 9 |
| Non-MM related ( | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Disease status at last follow-up | |||
| CR ( | 40 (49%) | 13 (68%) | 2 (20%) |
| VGPR ( | 23 (28%) | 2 (11%) | 1 (10%) |
| PR ( | 5 (6%) | 3 (16%) | 1 (10%) |
| Refractory/stable ( | 14 (17%) | 1 (5%) | 6 (60%) |
Three patients over 65 years had MEL100 as conditioning regimen: one patient for maintaining renal insufficiency after induction therapy; one patient for reduced number of cells for infusion (1.6 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg); and another patient for subjective evaluation of frailty. Two younger patients had conditioning with MEL140, both for persistent creatinine clearance ≤ 40 mL/min
Graph 1Deepening of response after transplant according to age. a Transplanted patients ≤ 65 years old; b transplanted elderly patients
Graph 2OS according to age, median follow-up 30 months. Median 83 months in patients < 65 years old and 59 months in elderly patients (p = 0.15)
Graph 3OS according to the dose of melphalan in the elderly group, median follow-up 30 months. Median 59 months in patients conditioned with reduced doses of melphalan vs 62 months in patients conditioned with high doses of melphalan (p = 0.73)
Graph 4OS of elderly patients according to transplant status, median follow-up 30 months. Transplanted group with a median of 59 months vs 30 months in non-transplanted group (p = 0.037)