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
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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
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3
Q

MM Risk Factors

A
  • Ionizing radiation**
  • Hereditary
  • MGUS
  • Environment
  • HIV (4.5x risk)
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4
Q

MM Screening

A
  • No established guideline

- Careful monitoring for at risk patients

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5
Q

MM Signs/Symptoms

A
  • Anemia
  • Renal insufficiency
  • Bacterial infections
  • Oteolytic lesions
  • Neurological Symptoms
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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
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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
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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
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9
Q

CRAB

A

C - HyperCalcemia
R - Renal Insufficiency
A - Anemia
B - Bone lesions

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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)
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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
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12
Q

Bortezomib/Carfilzomib

A
  • Proteosome Inhibitors

- Can cause neuropathy (B>C), fatigue, cardiac events (C>B), mild-mod myelosuppression

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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
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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
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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
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16
Q

Stem Cell Transplantation

A
  • Autologous stem cell transplantation generally with a newer agent is used now
  • Delayed transplantation is usually not an option
  • Better responses before transplantation have better prognosis for lasting effects
  • Tandem stem cell transplant recently shown to have some benefit in studies
17
Q

Relapsed Disease

A
  • Same criteria for treatment as more initiation unless patient’s M-protein is doubling
  • Pomalidomide + low dose dexa is used for refractory disease
  • Daratumab also approved for refractory disease in patients receiving 3 prior lines of standard therapy
  • Dara combined with the pomal + dexa now for those receiving 2 prior standard therapies
  • Ixazomib is a possible option too
18
Q

Lytic Bone Lesion Supportive Care

A
-Pamidronate 90 mg IV
OR
-Zoledronate 4 mg IV 
-Q3-4w x 2 years
-Denosumab for CrCl < 30 or alt to bisphosphonates
-Avoid NSAIDs
19
Q

DVT Prophylaxis

A
  • No or 1 MM risk factor: Aspirin 81-325 mg QD
  • IMiD: Aspirin 325 mg QD
  • > = 2 risk factors: warfarin or LMWH

**Risk factors described in handout)

20
Q

Infection Prophylaxis

A
  • Most common cause of early death in MM
  • Prophylactic antibiotics considered controversial
  • Herpes prophylaxis (acyclovir 400mg BID) recommended for all treated with proteasome inhibitors or daratumumab