| Literature DB >> 32440105 |
Kelly L Schoenbeck1, Tanya M Wildes2.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma is a hematologic malignancy that predominantly affects older adults, with a median age at diagnosis of 70 years old. A mainstay of multiple myeloma treatment is lenalidomide, which is an immunomodulatory drug (IMiD) that changed the treatment paradigm for multiple myeloma. This is particularly true for older adults who do not undergo autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Several pivotal trials summarized in this review demonstrate the efficacy and safety of lenalidomide in older adults with multiple myeloma, including significant improvements in response rates, progression-free survival and overall survival in the first-line and relapsed/refractory settings. Potential adverse effects include venous thromboembolism, cytopenias, and second malignancies and the doses tolerated in real-world older patients are often lower than those utilized in clinical trials enrolling select older patients. Given the heterogeneity of aging, several approaches to measuring frailty have been developed and validated to aid in predicting which older adults may benefit from empiric dose reduction to reduce the risk of toxicity and improve the tolerability of treatment. A number of randomized trials have explored a range of approaches utilizing lenalidomide in older adults in both the up-front and relapsed setting, ranging from attenuated maintenance strategies through quadruplet combination therapies including proteasome inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies. This wealth of literature provides a great number of options, which can make it difficult for a clinician to determine a single optimal recommendation for an individual patient. While lenalidomide is currently part of standard of care, the treatment of multiple myeloma is growing rapidly. There is a need to expand clinical trials participation to older adults with multiple myeloma. Incorporation of validated comprehensive geriatric assessments in clinical trials for multiple myeloma could provide a more accurate depiction of the older patient population and is an area for future exploration.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; lenalidomide; multiple myeloma; older adults
Year: 2020 PMID: 32440105 PMCID: PMC7210019 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S196087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Timeline of important lenalidomide trials in the treatment of older adults with multiple myeloma.
Summary of Pivotal Trials Including Lenalidomide for Older Adults with Multiple Myeloma Who are Ineligible for High-Dose Therapy and Autologous Stem Cell Transplant
| Trial (Year) | Trial Phase | Older Adults | Age, Median | High ECOG (0–1) or KPS (90–100) | Regimen | PFS | OS | Grade 3–4 Toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lenalidomide and Melphalan-Based Regimens | ||||||||
| GIMEMA MPR | I/II | Yes | 71 | 43% | Induction: Melphalan, Prednisone, Lenalidomide | N/A | 100% | Cytopenias; febrile neutropenia; VTE |
| MM-015 | III | Yes | 71 | Arms 1/2: 80 | Arm 1: MPR-R | Arm 1: 31 mo | Arm 1: 70% | Cytopenias; infections; VTE |
| E1A06 ECOG | III | Yes | Arm 1: 75.8 | Arm 1: 81.2% | Arm 1: MPT-T | Arm 1: 21 mo | Arm 1: 52.6 mo | Cytopenias; VTE |
| MPT-T versus MPR-R (2016) | III | Yes | Arm 1: 72 | Arm 1: 81% | Arm 1: MPT-T | Arm 1: 20 mo | Arm 1: 73% | Peripheral neuropathy (MPT-T); neutropenia (MPR-R); infection; VTE |
| Lenalidomide and Dexamethasone-Based Regimens | ||||||||
| SWOG S0232 | III | No | N/A | 85% | Induction: | Arm 1: 78% | Arm 1: 94% | Neutropenia; VTE |
| E4A03 ECOG | III | No | Arm 1: 66 | 91% | Arm 1: Lenalidomide; dexamethasone 40 mg daily D1-4, 9–12, and 17–20 | N/A | Arm 1: 87% | Pneumonia; VTE |
| FIRST | III | Yes | 73 | Arm 1: 77% | Arm 1: Rd (continuous) | Arm 1: 25.5 mo | Arm 1: 70% | Neutropenia; infection |
| Triplet vs Doublet (2016) | III | Yes | Arm 1: 74 | Arm 1: 80 | Arm 1: MPR | Arm 1: 24 mo | Arm 1: 65% | Neutropenia; infection |
| Rd-R vs Rd | III | Yes | Arm 1: 75 | N/A | Arm 1: Induction: Lenalidomide 25 mg; dexamethasone 20 mg | Arm 1: 18.3 mo | Arm 1: 85% at 18 mo | Neutropenia; infections; dermatologic reactions |
| Lenalidomide and Dexamethasone-Based Regimens in Relapsed/Refractory Disease | ||||||||
| RevLite (2017) | II | Yes | Arm 1: 69 | N/A | Arm 1: Lenalidomide 15 mg; dexamethasone 20 mg | Arm 1: 8.9 mo | Arm 1: 30.5 mo | Infection; VTE (RD) |
| Real-world dosing (2017) | Retro. | Yes | 76.5 | 73% | Lenalidomide: 5–10 mg (66%), 15 mg (20%), 20–25 mg (14%); dexamethasone 20 or 40 mg | N/A | Dose 5–10 mg daily: 38.9 mo | Cytopenias; fatigue; rash |
| Lenalidomide and Bortezomib-Based Regimens | ||||||||
| SWOG S0777 (2017) | III | No | 63 | Arm 1: 88% | Arm 1: VRd + Rd maintenance | Arm 1: 43 mo | Arm 1: 75 mo | Cytopenias; infection; VTE; peripheral neuropathy (VRd) |
| RVD-lite (2018) | II | Yes | 73 | 86% | Induction: | 35.1 mo | Not reached | Fatigue; hypo-phosphatemia; neutropenia |
| Lenalidomide and Daratumumab-Based Regimens | ||||||||
| MAIA (2019) | III | Yes | Arm 1: 73 | Arm 1: 82.9% | Arm 1: Lenalidomide 25 mg; dexamethasone 40 mg (or 20 mg if over age 75); Daratumumab | Arm 1: not reached | Arm 1: not reached | Cytopenias; infection |
Abbreviations: N/A, not available; mo, months; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; KPS, Karnofsky Performance Status; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; VTE, venous thromboembolism; M, melphalan, P, prednisone, R, lenalidomide; D, dexamethasone; T, thalidomide; V, bortezomib.
IMPEDE VTE: A Risk Model for VTE Development in Patients with Multiple Myeloma
| Immunomodulatory drug | +4 |
| Body Mass Index ≥25 kg/m2 | +1 |
| Pelvic, hip, or femur fracture | +4 |
| Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent | +1 |
| Doxorubicin | +3 |
| Dexamethasone Dose | |
| High-Dose | +4 |
| Low-Dose | +2 |
| Ethnicity/Race = Asian/Pacific Islander | −3 |
| History of VTE before MM | +5 |
| Tunneled line/central venous catheter | +2 |
| Existing thromboprophylaxis: therapeutic LWMH or warfarin | −4 |
| Existing thromboprophylaxis: prophylactic LWMH or warfarin | −3 |
Abbreviations: VTE, venous thromboembolism; MM, multiple myeloma; LWMH, low weight molecular heparin.