| Literature DB >> 32048329 |
Eirini Katodritou1, Efstathios Kastritis2, Moshe Gatt3, Yael C Cohen4, Irit Avivi4, Anastasia Pouli5, Chrysavgi Lalayianni6, Noa Lavi7, Sosana Delimpasis8, Marie-Christine Kyrtsonis9, Michalis Michael10, Celia Suriu11,12, Zektser Miri13, Katrin Tzafarti14, Chrysanthi Vadikoliou6, Dimitris Maltezas15, Panagiotis Zikos16, Chezi Ganzel17, Yuliana Vaxman18, Ariel Aviv19, Anna Christoforidou20, Maria Gavriatopoulou2, Adir Shaulov3, Evgenia Verrou1, Aristea-Maria Papanota2, Gabriel Fakinos5, Annita-Ioanna Gkioka9, Vasiliki Palaska1, Theodora Triantafyllou1, Pavlina Konstantinidou1, Achilles Anagnostopoulos6, Evangelos Terpos2, Meletios A Dimopoulos2.
Abstract
We investigated incidence, characteristics and outcome of patients with macrofocal multiple myeloma (MFMM) treated mainly with novel therapies. Based on definition (BMPCs <20% and lytic lesions/plasmacytomas, without anemia, renal insufficiency or hypercalcemia) we identified 140 patients with MFMM, among 4650 myeloma patients (3%). Twice the number of patients with typical myeloma were used as controls; 60% were <65 years and 70% had advanced bone disease. Plasmacytomas were more frequent in MFMM compared with standard myeloma (68% vs 15%, P < .05). Adverse prognostic parameters (high lactate dehydrogenase, advanced stage, high risk cytogenetics, immunoparesis) were less common in patients with MFMM compared with controls (P < .05); 90% received novel agents and 47% underwent autologous transplantation upfront; 90% achieved an objective response; 70% had at least very good partial response which was significantly higher compared with controls (P < .05). After a median follow-up of 52 months, 33 patients have died. Early death (<12 months) was infrequent in MFMM. Median progression-free survival and overall survival (OS) were 46 and 129 months respectively, both significantly longer compared with controls (P < .001). Proteasome inhibitor (PI)-based therapy was the only independent predictor for OS in the multivariate analysis (HR: 3.9; P < .001). In conclusion, MFMM is a distinct entity presented in young and elderly subjects, characterized by limited bone marrow infiltration, advanced bone disease and frequent presence of plasmacytomas; MFMM patients have less often adverse prognostic features and achieve excellent responses and prolonged OS especially when treated with PI-based therapies. Novel imaging will help in a more accurate classification of this entity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32048329 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.25755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047