Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of...

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Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002

Transcript of Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of...

Page 1: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma

Mark B. Juckett MD

Division of Hematology

University of Wisconsin

December 11, 2002

Page 2: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Introduction

• Multiple myeloma is a clonal plasma cell neoplasm

• Usually accompanied by monoclonal antibody production

• 1% of all cancer

• Median age 65 years

• Incidence higher in African populations

Page 3: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Cancer Mortality WisconsinWhite males, ages 50-74

Page 4: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Wisconsin Cancer Mortality Black males, ages 50-74

Page 5: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Age specific Mortality by Race

Page 6: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

75,075 total deaths 1970 –1994White males

Myeloma Mortality by State

Page 7: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

75,075 total deaths 1970 –1994Black males

Myeloma Mortality by State

Page 8: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Regional Mortality RateMyeloma 1970-1994

Page 9: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Age-adjusted Incidence per 100,000

Male Female

White 6.2 4.1

Black 11.8 10.0

Page 10: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Etiology

• Familial clustering

• African Americans

• Radiation

• Agriculture, Benzene, Radiation, Sheet metal work

• Chronic inflammatory disorders

Page 11: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Normal B cell Development

Travel

Lymph Node

Follicles

BoneMarrow

Pre B cellIgM

B cell

Page 12: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

B cell finds “meaning”

B cell activation

Germinal CenterFormation

“meaning”

Page 13: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Plasma Cells travel back to bone marrow

Memory B cell

“Activated B cell”

Plasma Cell

Page 14: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Properties of Plasma Cells

• Proliferate

• Secrete Immunoglobulins

• “Make space”

• Influence bone turnover

• Secrete Inflammatory mediators

Page 15: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Clinical Manifestations

• Plasma Cell proliferation– Pancytopenia, bone damage, constitutional

symptoms, anorexia, cachexia, hypercalcemia

• Monoclonal protein production– Renal failure, hyperviscosity, amyloidosis,

hypoalbuminemia, neurologic symptoms

• Immunodeficiency– Infection, autoimmune phenomena

Page 16: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Presenting Symptoms and Signs

• Symptoms– Back Pain

– Fatigue

– Anorexia

– Recurrent infection

– Constipation

– Somulence

– Fracture

– Neuropathy

• Signs– Lytic lesions

– Anemia, pancytopenia

– Hypercalcemia

– Renal insufficiency

– Monoclonal proteins

– Organomegaly

– Bone tumors

– Hypogammaglobulins

Page 17: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Initial Diagnostic Workup

• H&P• CBC• BUN/creat, lytes• Calcium/albumin• Quant Ig• SPEP/immunofix

• Bone Marrow Biopsy• 24-hour urine• UPEP/immunofix• Beta2-microglobulin• Skeletal survey

Page 18: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Lytic Bone Lesions in Myeloma

•Important for diagnosis•Treatment of impending fracture

Page 19: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Protein ElectrophoresisSerum or Urine

Page 20: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

StagingGreater than 20% plasma cells

• Stage I (All)– Hgb > 10 g/dl

– Normal calcium

– Normal bones or Solitary plasmacytoma

– Low M-protein• IgG < 5 g/dl

• IgA < 3 g/dl

• Light chains < 4 g/24 h

• Stage III (Any)– Hgb < 10 g/dl

– Hypercalcemia

– Multiple lytic lesions

– High M-protein• IgG > 7 g/dl

• IgA > 5 g/dl

• Light chains > 12 g/24 h

•Stage II – not fitting I or III

Page 21: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Smoldering Myeloma

• Monoclonal gammopathy– IgG > 3.5 g/dl and < 5 g/dl– IgA > 2 g/dl and < 3 g/dl– Urine light chains > 1 g/dl

• Bone Marrow Plasma cells– Greater than 10% and less than 20%

• No anemia, renal insufficiency, hypercalcemia• No lytic lesions or diffuse osteopenia

Page 22: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

NCCN Treatment Guidelines

• National Comprehensive Cancer Network– Group of NCI Cancer Centers

• Evidence based guidelines of appropriate care for general population

• Reviewed annually and updated by panel members

• Available online: www.nccn.org

Page 23: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

TreatmentSolitary Plasmacytoma

• Radiation therapy 45 to 50 Gy

• Follow up– CBC, SPEP, UPEP, chemistry every 3 months– Bone Survey ± CT scan or MRI every 6 mo– Yearly evaluation after one year and no disease

Page 24: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

TreatmentSmoldering or Stage I myeloma

• Counseling and observation• Followup

– CBC, SPEP, UPEP, chemistry every 3 mo

– Bone survey ± Bone marrow biospy every 6 mo

• Clinical trial of thalidomide or other biological therapy

• Progression to Stage II, III disease– Treat accordingly

Page 25: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Treatment Stage II or III disease

• General Goals of Oncology– Cure to regain normal life– Achieve complete remission to preserve quality

life– Control disease to preserve quality life– Minimize symptoms– Prevent suffering

Page 26: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Treatment Stage II or III disease

• Combination chemotherapy– Not curative, complete remission uncommon

• Multiple regimens – none yet shown to improve survival over 30 years of study

• Regimen choice depending on goals of therapy

• Supportive care crucial for preservation of function and activity

Page 27: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

TreatmentStage II or III disease

• Goals of initial treatment– Gain control of disease

– Improve organ function

– Maintain activity & function

– Relieve pain, constitutional symptoms

• Chemotherapy regimens differ in toxicity, ability to achieve remission

• Approach differs depending on age, comorbidity, possibility of stem cell transplant

Page 28: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Stem cell transplant for myeloma

• Rationale– Dose response relationship for remission and

hematologic toxicity– Stem cell transplant minimizes the hematologic

toxicity of high dose chemotherapy– Stem cell transplant has no anti-myeloma effect

per se but allows escalation of chemotherapy

Page 29: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Randomized Trials Comparing Standard vs. High-dose chemotherapy

Chemotherapy High-dose

Chemotherapy

CR rate 5 – 11% 22 – 30%

Event-free

Survival

18 – 30 mos 24 – 42 mos

Overall

Survival

44 – 64 mos 57 – 72 mos

Page 30: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

High-dose Chemotherapy for Myeloma

Attal NEJM 335:91, 1996

5 yr OS•Convential chemo 12%•High Dose 52%

•No Cure

Page 31: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Candidates for High-dose chemotherapy

• Who?– Responding patients– Age < 65 yo, possible for age 65 – 75 years– Adequate renal, pulmonary, cardiac function

• When?– Upfront vs. first relapse: Same overall survival,

but better QOL with upfront

Page 32: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Investigational Approaches

• Thalidomide– Response rate 36% in relapse

• PS-341, Arsenic trioxide, R115777

• Allogeneic transplant– Outpatient treatment with minimal

chemotherapy– Studies suggest long remissions – Cure?

Page 33: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Non-myeloablative SCT

Immunosuppression

onlyStem cells

Manipulate the Immune response to maximize Graft vs. Disease

Page 34: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Auto/Allo Transplant for Myeloma

• Auto - improve cytoreduction with less morbidity prior to NST

• Allo NST - use in minimal residual disease state to allow time for “GVM”

• Separate Auto and Allo to reduce TRM

Page 35: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Auto/Allo NST - Results

• 32 patients (median age 55)

• Previously treated (43% refractory/relapse)

• Mel-200 with PBSCT

• NST - TBI 2Gy, PBSCT, CSA, MMF

• 31/32 received both

• NST - median 0 days hospitalization, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia

Maloney, Blood 98:1822a

Page 36: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Auto/Allo NST - Results (cont)

• Overall survival 81% (median f/u 423 days)

• Day-100 mortality 6%

• GVHD– Acute 45%– Chronic 55%

• Response Rate 84% (CR 53%, PR 31%)

• 2 Patients have progressed

Maloney, Blood 98:1822a

Page 37: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Supportive Care

• Prevent Fractures– 85% of patients have lytic bone disease– Biphosphonates – Pamidronate, Zolentronate– Local radiotherapy for critical lytic lesions and

persistent pain

• Anemia– Erythropoietin helpful for anemia patients

• Infection– Prophylactic antibiotics and IV immunoglobulin for

patients with recurrent infection

Page 38: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Monoclonal Gammopathy

• Increasingly common with age• Associated with many inflammatory conditions• Diagnosis depends on finding M-protein

– But

• No evidence of clinical disease– No lytic lesions

– Plasma cells below 10% in the bone marrow

– Normal blood counts and renal function

Page 39: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Distinguishing between MGUS and Myeloma

• Rising M-spike• Urinary free light chains• Decreased immunoglobulins• Plasmacytosis greater than 10%• Osteolysis• Hypercalcemia• Spleen or liver involvement• Anemia or pancytopenia• Elevated ESR

Page 40: Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Mark B. Juckett MD Division of Hematology University of Wisconsin December 11, 2002.

Conclusions

• Myeloma is a cancer of plasma cells• Patients suffer primarily from bone disease,

anemia and renal disease• Conventional treatment is non-curative• Aggressive treatment with high-dose

chemotherapy preserves quality life• Supportive care improves quality life (and

survival)