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Continuous therapy in standard- and high-risk newly-diagnosed multiple myeloma: A pooled analysis of 2 phase III trials

Authors :
Mattia D’Agostino
Lorenzo De Paoli
Concetta Conticello
Massimo Offidani
Roberto Ria
Maria Teresa Petrucci
Stefano Spada
Magda Marcatti
Lucio Catalano
Milena Gilestro
Tommasina Guglielmelli
Luca Baldini
Barbara Gamberi
Rita Rizzi
Giovanni De Sabbata
Nicola Di Renzo
Francesca Patriarca
Sara Pezzatti
Agostina Siniscalchi
Rossella Ribolla
Antonio Palumbo
Vittorio Montefusco
Arnon Nagler
Mario Boccadoro
Francesca Gay
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background Risk-adapted therapy is a common strategy in curable hematologic malignancies: standard-risk patients receive less intensive treatment, whereas high-risk patients require a more intensive approach. This model cannot be applied in multiple myeloma (MM), which is still incurable. Continuous treatment (CT) is a key strategy for MM treatment, since it improves duration of remission. However, the role of CT according to standard- or high-risk baseline prognosis remains an open question. Patients and methods We performed a pooled analysis of 2 phase III trials (GIMEMA-MM-03-05 and RV-MM-PI-209) that randomized patients to CT vs fixed-duration therapy (FDT). Results In the overall patient population (n = 550), CT improved progression-free survival1 (PFS1) (HR 0.54), PFS2 (HR 0.61) and overall survival (OS) (HR 0.71) vs FDT. CT improved PFS1 both in R-ISS I (HR 0.49) and R-ISS II/III patients (HR 0.55). Four-year PFS1 was 38% in R-ISS II/III patients receiving CT and 25% in R-ISS I patients receiving FDT, with similar trends for PFS2 and OS. High-risk patients benefited more from proteasome-inhibitor plus immunomodulatory-based CT than immunomodulatory alone. Conclusion Good prognosis patients receiving FDT lose their prognostic advantage over high-risk patients receiving CT and high-risk patients may benefit from more intensive maintenance including proteasome inhibitors and immunomodulators.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b1af697b75f50b6d8058823c10d6bf17