Multiple Myeloma Flashcards
1
Q
Multiple Myeloma Epidemiology
A
- 3rd most common hematologic malignancy
- More common in African American than White
- More are not dying from the disease itself now
2
Q
MM Patho
A
- Malignancy of plasma cells resulting in plasma cells that can’t mature into immunoglobulin secreting cells
- Progression from normal plasma cells to MGUS to MM
- Genetic mutations increase with disease progression
- Cells secrete IL-6 which is a growth factor that supports their survival
3
Q
MM Risk Factors
A
- Ionizing radiation**
- Hereditary
- MGUS
- Environment
- HIV (4.5x risk)
4
Q
MM Screening
A
- No established guideline
- Careful monitoring for at risk patients
5
Q
MM Signs/Symptoms
A
- Anemia
- Renal insufficiency
- Bacterial infections
- Oteolytic lesions
- Neurological Symptoms
6
Q
MM Diagnosis
A
- CBC diff
- Chemistry
- BM aspiration and biopsy
- Skeletal survey and/or PET CT
- Serum and urine electrophoresis (M-protein spike)
- 1 major and 1 minor criteria to meet diagnosis
7
Q
MM Treatment Goals
A
- Disease control and reversal of disease complications
- Well tolerated therapy
- Decrease risk of early mortality
- Maintain availability of stem cells for potential future transplantation
8
Q
MM Treatment
A
- Only done for actual multiple myeloma
- Initiating earlier based on progressive disease with end organ damage (CRAB)
- Variety of induction and maintenance therapy regimens
9
Q
CRAB
A
C - HyperCalcemia
R - Renal Insufficiency
A - Anemia
B - Bone lesions
10
Q
Response Criteria
A
- PR: partial response, 50% or more decrease in serum M-protein and abnormal bone marrow plasma levels
- VGFR: very good partial response, 90% or more decrease in serum M-protein
- CR - complete response, negative for serum M-protein, disappearance of soft tissue plasmacytomas and <5% abnormal bone marrow plasma cells
- Stringent CR: Cr above + normal free light chain ratio and absence of a clone of abnormal bone marrow plasma cells
- MRD: minimal residual disease on bone marrow samples, additional response criteria with flow cytometry or next-generation sequencing (can identify remaining disease)
11
Q
Thalidomide/Lenalidomide
A
- Attack multiple targets in microenvironment of myeloma cell
- Causes apoptosis and inhibition of angiogenesis and cytokine circuits
- AE: Neuropathy (T), fatigue (L), thrombosis (L>T)
- Full dose aspirin recommended for patients with mitigate VTE risk
12
Q
Bortezomib/Carfilzomib
A
- Proteosome Inhibitors
- Can cause neuropathy (B>C), fatigue, cardiac events (C>B), mild-mod myelosuppression
13
Q
CyBorD
A
- Cyclophosphamide, bortezomib, and dexamethasone
- Primary treatment option for transplant eligible patients with acute renal insufficiency
- If renal fxn improves, can switch to VRd
14
Q
Ineligible BM Transplant
A
- Give initial chemo
- Treatment based on comorbidities and performance status
- No longer use melphalan due to better benefits of newer agents
15
Q
Renal Adjustments
A
- None for Carfilzomib, hold or reduce if fxn worsens on drug though
- Lenalidomide: dose adjustments for CrCl <60
- Pomalidomide: no adjustments until CrCl<15, will be removed due to hemodialysis
- Zoledronate: Dose reductions when CrCl < 60