| Literature DB >> 33990881 |
Claudio Cerchione1, Davide Nappi2, Giovanni Martinelli3.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) survival rates have been substantially increased thanks to novel agents that have improved survival outcomes and shown better tolerability than treatments of earlier years. These new agents include immunomodulating imide drugs (IMiD) thalidomide and lenalidomide, the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (PI), recently followed by new generation IMID pomalidomide, monoclonal antibodies daratumumab and elotuzumab, and next generation PI carfilzomib and ixazomib. However, even in this more promising scenario, febrile neutropenia remains a severe side effect of antineoplastic therapies and can lead to a delay and/or dose reduction in subsequent cycles. Supportive care has thus become key in helping patients to obtain the maximum benefit from novel agents. Filgrastim is a human recombinant subcutaneous preparation of G-CSF, largely adopted in hematological supportive care as "on demand" (or secondary) prophylaxis to recovery from neutropenia and its infectious consequences during anti-myeloma treatment. On the contrary, pegfilgrastim is a pegylated long-acting recombinant form of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) that, given its extended half-life, can be particularly useful when adopted as "primary prophylaxis," therefore before the onset of neutropenia, along chemotherapy treatment in multiple myeloma patients. There is no direct comparison between the two G-CSF delivery modalities. In this review, we compare data on the two administrations' modality, highlighting the efficacy of the secondary prophylaxis over multiple myeloma treatment. Advantage of pegfilgrastim could be as follows: the fixed administration rather than multiple injections, reduction in neutropenia and febrile neutropenia rates, and, finally, a cost-effectiveness advantage.Entities:
Keywords: Febrile neutropenia; G-CSF; Multiple myeloma; Pegfilgrastim; Supportive care
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Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33990881 PMCID: PMC8464555 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-021-06266-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
An overview of the reported studies
| References | Study design | Patients and treatment | PEG schedule | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knop et al. [ | Phase1/trial, MTD evaluation | 190 RRMM patients undergoing RAD | Pegfilgrastim 6 mg s.c. day + 6 as primary prophylaxis | Grade 3–4 neutropenia and infections rates were 48% and 10.5%, respectively | PEG prophylaxis led to better tolerability of lenalidomide-related neutropenia, thus providing better outcomes |
| Leleu et al. [ | Prospective, observational | 198 MM patients undergoing lenalidomide plus dexamethasone | Only 16 patients on primary prophylaxis with PEG (no dose reported) | 12 patients had a reduction of lenalidomide exposure and long GCSF course | Some patients would have been well tolerated lenalidomide with PEG prophylaxis instead of GCSF support |
| Mey et al. [ | Prospective phase 2 | 50 RRMM patients undergoing bendamustine-lenalidomide-dexamethasone | Pegfilgrastim 6 mg s.c. day + 3 as primary prophylaxis | Grade 4 neutropenia 34% of patients | PEG prophylaxis limited bendamustine toxicity, leading to better outcome |
| Cerchione et al. [ | Observational | 41 heavily pre-treated RRMM patients supported with GCSF or PEG | Pegfilgrastim 6 mg s.c. day + 3 | Neutropenia duration was shorter and quantitatively reduced in PEG primary prophylaxis setting vs GCSF on demand setting | PEG provided better tolerability of treatment regimens, with less treatment disruption neutropenia or FN-related |
| Cerchione et al. [ | Observational | 47 heavily pre-treated RRMM patients supported with GCSF or PEG while on bendamustine | Pegfilgrastim 6 mg s.c. day + 4 | Neutropenia duration was shorter and quantitatively reduced in PEG primary prophylaxis setting vs GCSF on demand setting | PEG provided better tolerability of treatment regimens, with less treatment disruption neutropenia or FN-related |