| Literature DB >> 35314675 |
Joan Bladé1, Meral Beksac2, Jo Caers3, Artur Jurczyszyn4, Marie von Lilienfeld-Toal5, Philippe Moreau6, Leo Rasche7, Laura Rosiñol8, Saad Z Usmani9, Elena Zamagni10, Paul Richardson11.
Abstract
Extramedullary involvement (or extramedullary disease, EMD) represents an aggressive form of multiple myeloma (MM), characterized by the ability of a clone and/or subclone to thrive and grow independent of the bone marrow microenvironment. Several different definitions of EMD have been used in the published literature. We advocate that true EMD is restricted to soft-tissue plasmacytomas that arise due to hematogenous spread and have no contact with bony structures. Typical sites of EMD vary according to the phase of MM. At diagnosis, EMD is typically found in skin and soft tissues; at relapse, typical sites involved include liver, kidneys, lymph nodes, central nervous system (CNS), breast, pleura, and pericardium. The reported incidence of EMD varies considerably, and differences in diagnostic approach between studies are likely to contribute to this variability. In patients with newly diagnosed MM, the reported incidence ranges from 0.5% to 4.8%, while in relapsed/refractory MM the reported incidence is 3.4 to 14%. Available data demonstrate that the prognosis is poor, and considerably worse than for MM without soft-tissue plasmacytomas. Among patients with plasmacytomas, those with EMD have poorer outcomes than those with paraskeletal involvement. CNS involvement is rare, but prognosis is even more dismal than for EMD in other locations, particularly if there is leptomeningeal involvement. Available data on treatment outcomes for EMD are derived almost entirely from retrospective studies. Some agents and combinations have shown a degree of efficacy but, as would be expected, this is less than in MM patients with no extramedullary involvement. The paucity of prospective studies makes it difficult to justify strong recommendations for any treatment approach. Prospective data from patients with clearly defined EMD are important for the optimal evaluation of treatment outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35314675 PMCID: PMC8938478 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-022-00643-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 9.812
Definitions of plasma cell neoplasms.
| Plasma cell neoplasm | Definition |
|---|---|
| Extramedullary disease | An aggressive form of multiple myeloma characterized by the presence of soft-tissue plasmacytomas that result from hematogenous spread |
| Paraskeletal plasmacytoma | A form of multiple myeloma characterized by the presence of soft-tissue plasmacytomas that occur due to direct growth from skeletal tumors following cortical bone disruption |
| Solitary plasmacytoma | A single mass of clonal plasma cells (bone or extramedullary) with no or minimal BM plasmacytosis and with no other symptoms than those derived from the primary lesion |
| Plasma cell leukemia | A rare and aggressive variant of myeloma characterized by the presence of circulating plasma cells; diagnosis is based upon the percentage (≥20%) and absolute number (≥2 × 109/L) of plasma cells in peripheral blood |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for qualitative synthesis.
Incidence rates of EMD in studies of patients with MM.
| Reference | No. of patients | Time period covered | Diagnostic approach | Incidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Montefusco et al. [ | 2322 | 2010–2018 (across all studies) | Skeletal survey, MRI, or CT; and/or physical examination | NDMM: 0.5% |
| Gagelmann et al. [ | 3744 | 2005–2014 | NR | NDMM: 3.7% |
| Deng et al. [ | 834 | 1993–2013 | X-ray, US, CT, physical examination; histologically confirmed where possible | NDMM: 4.8% RRMM: 3.4% |
| Weinstock et al. [ | 663 | 2005–2011 | Pathological or radiological evidence of EMD at any time following the initial diagnosis of MM | RRMM: 8.3% |
| Pour et al. [ | 226 | 2005–2008 | US, CT, or MRI | RRMM: 14% |
| Rasche et al. [ | 357 | 2007–2010 | Cytology, biopsy of clinical/radiological lesions | RRMM: 6.7% |
| Short et al. [ | 174 | 2007–2011 | PET/CT, MRI | NDMM: 1.7% RRMM: 7.5% |
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NR not reported, PET positron emission tomography, US ultrasound.
Treatment outcomes in patients with NDMM and EMD.
| Reference Study type | Total number of patients/ number with EMD | Time period covered | Treatments | PFS | OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Montefusco et al. [ Meta-analysis of 8 trials | 267 EMD, | 2010–2018 (across all studies) | IMiD-based therapy ( | Median (95% CI): 26.1 months (8.0–NR) | 2-year: 35% Median (95% CI): 70.1 months (16.9–NR) |
Batsukh et al. [ Retrospective | 64 EMD, | 2009–2016 | Bortezomib/dexamethasone ( Thalidomide/dexamethasone ( Bortezomib/thalidomide/dexamethasone ( Bortezomib/melphalan/prednisone ( Lenalidomide/dexamethasone ( Mlphalan/prednisolone or dexamethasone ( ASCT ( | Median (95% CI): 16.0 months (5.8–26.2) | Median (95% CI): 27.8 months (5.8–26.5) |
Beksac et al. [ Retrospective | 130 EMD, | 2010–2017 | Median two lines of treatment and ASCT (44%) | Median (95% CI): 38.9 months (23.6–54.2) | Median (95% CI): 46.5 months (25.5–67.5) |
Gagelmann et al. [ EBMT registry analysis | 488 EMD, | 2003–2014 | Induction with bortezomib ( Transplants: autologous ( | 3-year (range): 39% (27–52) | 3-year (range): 60% (48–73) |
Gagelmann et al. [ EBMT registry analysis | 682 EMD, | 2005–2014 | Upfront single ASCT within 12 months of diagnosis or a tandem ASCT within 6 months from first ASCT as first-line therapy | 3-year (range): 39.9% (30.3–49.5) | 3-year (range): 58.0% (48.1–67.9) |
ASCT autologous stem-cell transplantation, EBMT European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, EMD extramedullary disease, IMiD immunomodulatory drugs, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival, PI proteasome inhibitor.
Treatment outcomes in patients with RRMM and EMD.
| Reference Study type | Total number of patients/ number with EMD | Time period covered | Treatments | PFS | OS | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Avivi et al. [ Retrospective | 127 (all EMD) | 2010–2018 | First treatment included PIs (50%), IMiDs (39%), monoclonal antibodies (10%), and chemotherapy (53%) | – | – | 57% ORR ( ≥ PR) across all treatments |
Rasche et al. [ Single-center registry | 24 (all EMD) | 2007–2010 | Radiotherapy ( ASCT + intense dose chemotherapy ( Bortezomib ( Lenalidomide ( Thalidomide ( | Median (95% CI): 2 months (0.08–3.92) | Median (95% CI): 7 months (3.56–10.43) | – |
Beksac et al. [ Retrospective | 96 EMD, | 2010–2017 | Median two lines of treatment and ASCT (44%) | Median (95% CI): 9.1 months (11.6–15.6) | Median (95% CI): 11.4 months (0.6–16.2) | Complete remission rate: 9% (vs 54.5% in patients with paraskeletal, |
Short et al. [ Phase 2 trial | 16 (all EMD) | 2007–2010 | Pomalidomide + low-dose dexamethasone | – | Median: 16 months | – |
Zhou et al. [ Retrospective | 45 EMD, | Carfilzomib + dexamethasone-based | EMD significantly inferior PFS vs paraskeletal ( | EMD significantly inferior OS vs paraskeletal ( | – | |
Papanikolaou et al. [ Retrospective | 28 (all EMD) | 1998–2011 | At relapse:Bortezomib-containing regimens (32%) Platinum-containing (21%) Lenalidomide (21%) VAD (8%) | – | Median following relapse: 5 months Median from MM diagnosis: 38 months | – |
Rasche et al. [ Retrospective | 11 (all EMD) | 2007–2012 | Dexa-BEAM (including dexamethasone, carmustine, cytarabine, etoposide, and melphalan) | Median: 4 months | – | Objective response (≥PR) achieved in 6/11 patients |
Richardson et al. [ Phase 2 | 55 EMD, | Patients enrolled between Dec 2016 and Oct 2019 | Melflufen + dexamethasone | – | – | ORR: Non-EMD, 32% Paraskeletal, 25% EMD, 22% |
Wang et al. [ Single-center | 57 EMD, | 2016–2018 | LCAR-B38M | Median: 8.1 months (vs 25 months in non-EMD; | Median: 13.9 months (vs NR in non-EMD; | 82% ORR (≥ PR) vs 90% for non-EMD |
ASCT autologous stem cell transplantation, EMD extramedullary disease, MM multiple myeloma, NC not calculable, NR not reached, ORR overall response rate, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival, PR partial response, VAD vincristine/adriamycin/dexamethasone.
Treatment outcomes in studies of patients with CNS involvement.
| Reference Study type | No. of patients | Time period covered | Treatments | PFS | OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bommer et al. [ Retrospective | 16 (all LMM) | 2005–2016 | Intrathecal chemotherapy, radiotherapy | – | Median OS: 82 days (after LMM diagnosis) |
Jurczyszyn et al. [ Retrospective | 172 (38 at initial MM diagnosis, 134 at relapse/progression) | 1995–2014 | Systemic therapy ( Radiotherapy ( Intrathecal therapy ( Steroids only ( Mass resection ( SCT ( | – | Median OS: 6.7 months (all patients) 2 months (untreated patients) 8 months (treated patients) |
Paludo et al. [ Retrospective | 29 (7 at initial diagnosis of MM, 22 at relapse) | 1998–2014 | Radiation therapy ( Intrathecal + systemic therapy ( Systemic therapy ( Novel agents, including bortezomib (28%), thalidomide (14%), lenalidomide (10%), and pomalidomide (3%), administered after CNS involvement. ASCT after the diagnosis of CNS disease (24%) | Median OS (95% CI): CNS involvement, 40 months (24–56) Control (no CNS involvement), 93 months (67–129) Patients with ASCT after CNS involvement, 19 months (10–67) | |
Katodritou et al. [ Retrospective | 31 | 2000–2013 | Bortezomib-based ( IMiD-based ( Chemotherapy alone ( Intrathecal infusions ( Additional radiotherapy ( | Median (95% CI) CNS involvement, 16 months (2–30.6) Control (no CNS involvement), 36 months (12–60) | Median (95% CI) CNS involvement, 47 months (32–62) Control (no CNS involvement), 84 months (31–137) |
Abdallah et al. [ Retrospective | 35 | 1996–2012 | Chemotherapy, including intrathecal ( Intrathecal alone ( | – | Median (range): 4 months (1–13) |
Chen et al. [ Retrospective | 37 | 1999–2010 | Intrathecal chemotherapy (81%) Cranial and/or spinal irradiation (78%) IMiDs (51%) Cisplatin-based (27%) Bortezomib (19%) Alkylators (11%) Dexamethasone alone (8%) ASCT (5%) | Median (95% CI) after CNS involvement: 3.1 months (2.0–6.0) | Median (95% CI) after CNS involvement: 4.6 months (2.8–6.7) |
Lee et al. [ Retrospective | 17 | 2000–2011 | Systemic pharmacotherapy Intrathecal chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy | – | Median (range) after CNS involvement: 4 months (1–23) |
| Gozzetti et al. [ | 12 | 2000–2010 | Systemic treatment Systemic treatment + radiotherapy Systemic + radiotherapy + intrathecal Radiotherapy + intrathecal Intrathecal (note: specific treatments received by patients with CNS-MM not specified) | – | Median (range): 6 months (1–23) |
ASCT autologous stem cell transplantation, CNS central nervous system, IMiD immunomodulatory drug, LMM leptomeningeal myelomatosis, MM multiple myeloma.