| Literature DB >> 34857730 |
Carlos Fernández de Larrea1, Robert Kyle2, Laura Rosiñol3, Bruno Paiva4, Monika Engelhardt5, Saad Usmani6, Jo Caers7, Wilson Gonsalves2, Fredrik Schjesvold8, Giampaolo Merlini9, Suzanne Lentzch10, Enrique Ocio11, Laurent Garderet12, Philippe Moreau13, Pieter Sonneveld14, Ashraf Badros15, Gösta Gahrton16, Hartmut Goldschmidt17, Sascha Tuchman18, Hermann Einsele19, Brian Durie20, Baldeep Wirk21, Pellegrino Musto22, Patrick Hayden23, Martin Kaiser24, Jesús San Miguel4, Joan Bladé3, S Vincent Rajkumar2, Maria Victoria Mateos11.
Abstract
Primary plasma cell leukemia (PCL) has a consistently ominous prognosis, even after progress in the last decades. PCL deserves a prompt identification to start the most effective treatment for this ultra-high-risk disease. The aim of this position paper is to revisit the diagnosis of PCL according to the presence of circulating plasma cells in patients otherwise meeting diagnostic criteria of multiple myeloma. We could identify two retrospective series where the question about what number of circulating plasma cells in peripheral blood should be used for defining PCL. The presence of ≥5% circulating plasma cells in patients with MM had a similar adverse prognostic impact as the previously defined PCL. Therefore, PCL should be defined by the presence of 5% or more circulating plasma cells in peripheral blood smears in patients otherwise diagnosed with symptomatic multiple myeloma.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34857730 PMCID: PMC8640034 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-021-00587-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Main results of the two clinical studies used for this position paper [16, 17].
| Clinical series | ||
|---|---|---|
| Variable | Granell et al. [ | Ravi et al. [ |
| Number of patients | 482a | 176b |
| Age (median; years) | 69 | 62 |
| Sex (M/F); % | 42/58 | 56/44 |
| Patients with CPC; | 100 | 176 |
| 1–4% | 83 (83%) | 54 (31%) |
| 5–20% | 12 (12%) | 63 (36%) |
| More than 20% | 5 (5%) | 59 (34%) |
| 0% | 47 | 53 |
| 1-4% | 50 | 17 |
| 5–20% | 6 | 13 |
| More than 20% | 14 | 13 |
aTotally, 382 patients (included in the number in the table) without circulating plasma cells were used as controls.
bTotally, 9724 patients (not included in the number in the table) diagnosed in the same period without circulating plasma cells at diagnosis were used as controls.
cConsidering only patients with circulating plasma cells.
CPC circulating plasma cells.