Literature DB >> 9313875

Outcome assessment of a population-based group of 195 unselected myeloma patients under 70 years of age offered intensive treatment.

R Powles1, N Raje, S Milan, B Millar, V Shepherd, J Mehta, S Singhal, S Kulkarni, C Viner, M Gore, D Cunningham, J Treleaven.   

Abstract

A single centre series of 195 consecutive newly diagnosed untreated myeloma patients under 70 years, seen between September 1986 and March 1994, were analysed to assess the impact of current intensive treatment methods upon remission rate, response rate and subsequent outcome. They were predominantly an unselected population based group of patients (other than by age) that could be used by purchasers of health care as a model for outcome assessment. All patients were scheduled to receive a care plan which included a sequential package of treatment consisting initially of courses of infusional chemotherapy using vincristine, adriamycin and methyl prednisolone (VAMP) and 90 of these also received cyclophosphamide (C-VAMP). Thirty-eight patients received verapamil in addition to C-VAMP(V-C-VAMP). After VAMP all patients were planned to receive high-dose treatment with melphalan and an autograft (marrow or blood) and 112 received this treatment; a further 29 patients received modified high-dose treatment with melphalan alone (23) or busulfan (6) and 54 (28%) did not proceed to high-dose treatment because of refusal, resistant disease, poor performance or treatment-related death. The patients who received melphalan or busulfan alone instead of high-dose melphalan/autografts did so because of increasing age (P = 0.001) and a raised creatinine (P = 0.05). The complete remission rate was 53% for the whole group and 74% for those receiving high-dose melphalan and an autograft. From July 1988, the sequential therapy package included continuous three times weekly interferon (IFN) after high-dose treatment as maintenance therapy, initially as part of a controlled randomised trial and then for all suitable patients. Fifty-seven patients received IFN. The median overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) from first treatment for the whole group of 195 patients is 4.5 years and 25 months, respectively. The 112 patients receiving the melphalan autografts fared significantly better than the rest of the patients with OS and PFS (from high-dose treatment) of 6.6 years and 27 months, respectively (P < 0.005), and the 57 patients also receiving IFN have a OS yet to reach a median at 8 years and a PFS of 44 months, significantly better than non IFN high-dose patients (P < 0.0036). However, although we showed benefit for selected patients in studies and trials (particularly with IFN) during the 8-year period of the series, this did not translate into overall PFS benefit in our study for unselected cohorts of patients for 1986-1988 (64 patients) 1989-1992 (100 patients) and 1992-1994 (34 patients) in spite of progressive increases in the proportion of patients receiving IFN (respectively 6, 35 and 58%). This is likely to be due to the dilution of benefit to specific patients by the overall number of patients involved. Outcome data from unselected patients are now expected by purchasers and presented in this way, help qualify the activity impact of advances made from research trials for the treatment of population-based cancer problems.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9313875     DOI: 10.1038/sj.bmt.1700917

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone Marrow Transplant        ISSN: 0268-3369            Impact factor:   5.483


  7 in total

Review 1.  Multiple myeloma.

Authors:  N Raje; K C Anderson
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2000-04

2.  NY-ESO-1 is highly expressed in poor-prognosis multiple myeloma and induces spontaneous humoral and cellular immune responses.

Authors:  Frits van Rhee; Susann M Szmania; Fenghuang Zhan; Sushil K Gupta; Mindy Pomtree; Pei Lin; Ramesh B Batchu; Amberly Moreno; Guilio Spagnoli; John Shaughnessy; Guido Tricot
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2005-01-25       Impact factor: 22.113

3.  Older patients with myeloma derive similar benefit from autologous transplantation.

Authors:  Manish Sharma; Mei-Jie Zhang; Xiaobo Zhong; Muneer H Abidi; Görgün Akpek; Ulrike Bacher; Natalie S Callander; Angela Dispenzieri; César O Freytes; Henry C Fung; Robert Peter Gale; Cristina Gasparetto; John Gibson; Leona A Holmberg; Tamila L Kindwall-Keller; Thomas R Klumpp; Amrita Y Krishnan; Heather J Landau; Hillard M Lazarus; Sagar Lonial; Angelo Maiolino; David I Marks; Paulette Mehta; Joseph R Mikhael Med; Taiga Nishihori; Richard Olsson; Muthalagu Ramanathan; Vivek Roy; Bipin N Savani; Harry C Schouten; Emma Scott; Jason Tay; Luen Bik To; David H Vesole; Dan T Vogl; Parameswaran Hari
Journal:  Biol Blood Marrow Transplant       Date:  2014-07-18       Impact factor: 5.742

4.  Autologous Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation in Dialysis-Dependent Myeloma Patients.

Authors:  Riad El Fakih; Patricia Fox; Uday Popat; Yago Nieto; Nina Shah; Simrit Parmar; Betul Oran; Stephan Ciurea; Partow Kebriaei; Chitra Hosing; Sairah Ahmed; Jatin Shah; Robert Orlowski; Richard Champlin; Muzaffar Qazilbash; Qaiser Bashir
Journal:  Clin Lymphoma Myeloma Leuk       Date:  2015-03-27

5.  The implication of compromised renal function at presentation in myeloma: similar outcome in patients who receive high-dose therapy: a single-center study of 251 previously untreated patients.

Authors:  B Sirohi; R Powles; J Mehta; J Treleaven; N Raje; S Kulkarni; C Rudin; N Bhagwati; C Horton; R Saso; S Singhal; R Parikh
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 3.064

6.  Glomerular filtration rate prior to high-dose melphalan 200 mg/m(2) as a surrogate marker of outcome in patients with myeloma.

Authors:  B Sirohi; R Powles; S Kulkarni; C Rudin; R Saso; A Rigg; C Horton; S Singhal; J Mehta; J Treleaven
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2001-08-03       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 7.  Outcomes of patients who participate in randomized controlled trials compared to similar patients receiving similar interventions who do not participate.

Authors:  Gunn Elisabeth Vist; Dianne Bryant; Lyndsay Somerville; Trevor Birminghem; Andrew D Oxman
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2008-07-16
  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.