| Literature DB >> 34807986 |
Meera Mohan1,2, Samantha Kendrick3, Aniko Szabo4, Naveen Yarlagadda5, Dinesh Atwal5, Yadav Pandey6, Arya Roy6, Richa Parikh5, James Lopez7, Sharmilan Thanendrarajan1, Carolina Schinke1, Daisy Alapat8, Jeffrey Sawyer1, Erming Tian1, Guido Tricot1, Frits van Rhee1, Maurizio Zangari1.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) patients frequently attain a bone marrow (BM) minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity status in response to treatment. We identified 568 patients who achieved BM MRD negativity following autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) and maintenance combination therapy with an immunomodulatory agent and a proteasome inhibitor. BM MRD was evaluated by next-generation flow cytometry (sensitivity of 10-5 cells) at 3- to 6-month intervals. With a median follow-up of 9.9 years from diagnosis (range, 0.4-30.9), 61% of patients maintained MRD negativity, whereas 39% experienced MRD conversion at a median of 6.3 years (range, 1.4-25). The highest risk of MRD conversion occurred within the first 5 years after treatment and was observed more often in patients with abnormal metaphase cytogenetic abnormalities (95% vs 84%; P = .001). MRD conversion was associated with a high risk of relapse and preceded it by a median of 1.0 years (range, 0-4.9). However, 27% of MRD conversion-positive patients had not yet experienced a clinical relapse, with a median follow-up of 9.3 years (range, 2.2-21.2). Landmark analyses using time from ASCT revealed patients with MRD conversion during the first 3 years had an inferior overall and progression-free survival compared with patients with sustained MRD negativity. MRD conversion correctly predicted relapse in 70%, demonstrating the utility of serial BM MRD assessment to complement standard laboratory and imaging to make informed salvage therapy decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34807986 PMCID: PMC8945288 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529
Figure 1.Conversion to MRD positivity more likely occurs within 5 years of diagnosis or from first ASCT. (A) Time to MRD conversion from initial MM diagnosis or from first ASCT. (B) Forest plot of relative risk of patients with MRD conversion within 5 years from diagnosis compared with other time points. RR, relative risk.
Patient baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Total | MRD− | MRD conversion | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 568) | (n = 344) | (n = 224) | ||
| Median age, years (range) | 58 (29-80) | 58 (31-80) | 59 (31-79) | n.d. |
| Age ≥60 y | 263 (46.3) | 153 (44.5) | 110 (49.1) | .30 |
| Age ≥65 y | 172 (30.2) | 95 (27.6) | 77 (34.4) | .09 |
| Female sex | 232 (40.8) | 149 (43.3) | 83 (37.1) | .16 |
|
| (n = 560) | (n = 340) | (n = 220) | |
| Caucasian | 470 (83.9) | 285 (83.8) | 185 (82.6) | n.d. |
| African American | 77 (13.8) | 46 (13.5) | 31 (13.8) | |
| Asian | 9 (1.6) | 7 (2.0) | 2 (0.9) | |
| Native American | 4 (0.7) | 2 (0.6) | 2 (0.9) | |
| Hispanic | 78 (13.9) | 50 (14.5) | 28 (12.5) | n.d. |
|
| (n = 527) | (n = 318) | (n = 209) | |
| IgA | 85 (16.1) | 48 (15.1) | 37 (17.7) | .93 |
| IgD | 6 (1.1) | 4 (1.3) | 2 (1.0) | |
| IgG | 321 (60.9) | 197 (43.1) | 124 (59.3) | |
| Nonsecretory | 17 (3.2) | 10 (3.1) | 7 (3.3) | |
| LC | 95 (18.0) | 59 (18.6) | 36 (17.2) | |
| Albumin <3.5 g/dL | 150 (26.4) | 88 (25.6) | 62 (27.7) | .63 |
|
| (n = 565) | (n = 341) | ||
| ≥3.5 mg/L | 121 (21.4) | 68 (19.9) | 53 (23.7) | .30 |
| >5.5 mg/L | 45 (8.0) | 23 (6.7) | 22 (9.8) | .21 |
|
| ||||
| Stage 1 | 266 (46.8) | 163 (47.4) | 103 (46.0) | .74 |
| Stage 2 | 187 (32.9) | 115 (33.4) | 72 (32.1) | |
| Stage 3 | 115 (20.3) | 66 (19.2) | 49 (21.9) | |
|
| (n = 215) | (n = 114) | (n = 101) | |
| Stage 1 | 51 (23.7) | 30 (26.3) | 21 (20.8) | .53 |
| Stage 2 | 146 (67.9) | 76 (66.7) | 70 (69.3) | |
| Stage 3 | 18 (8.4) | 8 (7.0) | 10 (9.9) | |
| Creatinine ≥2 mg/dL | 30 (10.4) | 17 (4.9) | 13 (5.8) | .70 |
| CRP ≥8 mg/L | 59 (8.5) | 44 (12.8) | 15 (6.7) | .02 |
| Hb <10 g/dL | 180 (31.7) | 108 (31.4) | 72 (32.1) | .85 |
| LDH ≥190 U/L | 132 (23.2) | 75 (21.8) | 57 (25.4) | .36 |
|
| (n = 564) | (n = 341) | (n = 223) | |
| Any abnormality at a given locus | 240 (42.6) | 139 (40.7) | 101 (45.3) | .001 |
| Hypodiploidy | 90 (16.0) | 51 (15.0) | 39 (17.5) | |
| Hyperdiploidy | 166 (29.4) | 95 (27.9) | 71 (31.8) | |
| None | 68 (12.1) | 56 (16.4) | 12 (5.4) | |
|
| (n = 523) | (n = 317) | (n = 206) | |
| κ | 338 (64.6) | 210 (66.2) | 128 (62.1) | n.d. |
| Λ | 178 (33.4) | 106 (33.4) | 72 (35.0) | |
| Normal FLC ratio | (n = 509) | (n = 304) | (n = 205) | n.d. |
| 162 (31.8) | 100 (32.9) | 62 (30.2) | ||
| GEP70 high risk (≥0.66) | (n = 533) | (n = 317) | (n = 216) | n.d. |
| 37 (6.9) | 22 (6.9) | 15 (6.9) | ||
|
| (n = 533) | (n = 317) | (n = 216) | |
| CD-1 | 40 (7.5) | 25 (7.9) | 15 (7.0) | .41 |
| CD-2 | 106 (19.9) | 64 (20.2) | 42 (19.4) | |
| HY | 181 (34.0) | 101 (31.9) | 80 (37.0) | |
| LB | 74 (13.9) | 42 (13.2) | 32 (14.8) | |
| MF | 30 (5.6) | 22 (6.9) | 8 (3.7) | |
| MS | 56 (10.5) | 31 (9.8) | 25 (11.6) | |
| PR | 46 (8.6) | 32 (10.1) | 14 (6.5) | |
|
| ||||
| x1 | 568 (100) | 344 (100) | 224 (100) | n.d |
| x2 | 456 (80.3) | 283 (82.3) | 173 (80.1) |
Data are numbers (%) unless otherwise noted.
B2M, β-2-microglobulin; CRP, C-reactive protein; Hb, hemoglobulin; Ig, immunoglobin; LB, low bone; LC, light chain; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; n.d., not determined; RISS, Revised International Staging System.
P-value determined by Fisher’s exact test.
Figure 2.Abnormal cytogenetics in MM correlates with increased conversion from negative to positive MRD. MRD conversions were significantly more frequent for patients with any abnormality detected within the tumor including del17p, t(1:22), t(11:14)), hypodiploidy, or hyperdiploidy compared with those with normal tumor cytogenetics (hazard ratio [HR], 1.4; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1-1.8; P = .002). Upper and lower bands represent 95% CI.
MRD relapse patterns
| MRD status | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical End Point | MRD− | MRD conversion | |
| (n = 344) | (n = 224) | ||
| No clinical relapse | 330 (95.9) | 61 (27.2) | <.0001 |
| Relapse | 14 (4.1) | 163 (72.8) | <.0001 |
| Clinical relapse | 14 (4.1) | 118 (52.7) | <.0001 |
| Biochemical relapse | 0 (0.0) | 45 (20.1) | <.0001 |
Data are numbers (%) unless otherwise noted.
P-value determined by Fisher’s exact test.
Relapse defined using IMWG criteria, reappearance of serum or urine M-protein by immunofixation or electrophoresis, development of >5% plasma cells in the BM, or appearance of any other sign of progression (ie, new plasmacytoma, lytic bone lesion, or hypercalcaemia)[14]
Clinical relapse defined as relapse with any 1 of the following: >30% BM involvement, presence of focal lesion on imaging (PET-CT, MRI DWIBS), presence of CRAB criteria, presence of high-risk GEP signature at relapse, or abnormal metaphase cytogenetics due to MM.
Biochemical relapse defined as relapse with any 1 of the following: a rising M-protein or FLC, <30% BM involvement, focal lesion on imaging (PET-CT, MRI DWIBS), no CRAB criteria, no high-risk GEP signature at relapse, or no abnormal metaphase cytogenetics due to MM.
Figure 3.MRD negativity within 6 months of diagnosis increases likelihood of MRD conversion and relapse in MM patients. Forest plots (A-B) of the relative risk for (A) patients with MRD conversion to experience the given clinical end point. Patients with MRD conversion were confirmed to be more likely to have disease progression relative to patients with sustained MRD negativity, particularly for clinical relapse. (B) Patients with attainment of MRD negativity up to 6 months from treatment have a greater risk of MRD conversion or clinical relapse relative to patients with first MRD negativity detected >6 months. (C) Patients that achieved MRD negativity up to 6 months from treatment have a more rapid time to MRD conversion from initial MM diagnosis (HR, 65.5; 95% CI, 26.7-163.0; P < .0001). (D) Forest plot of the RR for patients with clinical relapse are more likely to experience an IMWG-defined relapse using a cutoff of >0.20 ratio of myeloma to normal plasma cells. Number of patients represents the total number of patients with the given clinical end point. Upper and lower bars represent 95% CI.
Figure 4.MRD conversion confers inferior survival compared with sustained MRD negativity. (A) OS of patients with MRD conversion is worse compared with patients with sustained MRD negativity (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.1-1.7, P = .01). (B) PFS of patients with MRD conversion vs patients with sustained MRD negativity is significantly inferior (HR, 18.9; 95% CI, 13.2-27.0, P < .0001). In a landmark analysis at 3 years post-ASCT, (C) OS was significantly worse for patients that converted from MRD− to -positive compared with patients with sustained MRD negativity (HR, 20.0; 95% CI, 6.3-63.0, P < .0001). (D) PFS of patients with MRD conversion is significantly worse than patients with sustained MRD negativity (HR, 4.5; 95% CI, 4.3-33.7, P < .0001). Upper and lower bands represent 95% CI.
Figure 5.Timing of MRD conversion correlates with MM patient survival. (A) Patients undergoing MRD conversion ≤3 years from ASCT compared with >3 years have an inferior OS (HR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.8-8.2, P = .0003). (B) Patients undergoing MRD conversion <5 years from ASCT compared with ≥5 years have an inferior OS (HR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.2-4.0, P = .01). Upper and lower bands represent 95% CI.