Mode of Progression in Smoldering Multiple Myeloma: A study of 406 patients

Author:

Rajkumar S1ORCID,Abdallah Nadine1ORCID,Lakshman Arjun1,Kumar Shaji1ORCID,Cook Joselle1ORCID,Binder Moritz1ORCID,Kapoor Prashant1ORCID,Dispenzieri Angela1ORCID,Gertz Morie1ORCID,Lacy Martha1,HAYMAN Suzanne1,Buadi Francis1ORCID,Dingli David1ORCID,Lin Yi1ORCID,Kourelis Taxiarchis1ORCID,Warsame Rahma1,Bergsagel P. Leif2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic

2. Mayo Clinic in Arizona

Abstract

Abstract The approach to patients with high-risk smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) varies among clinicians; while some advocate early intervention, others reserve treatment at progression to multiple myeloma (MM). We aimed to describe the myeloma-defining events (MDEs) and clinical presentations leading to MM diagnosis among SMM patients seen at our institution. We included 406 patients diagnosed with SMM between 2013-2022, seen at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. The 2018 Mayo 20/2/20 criteria were used for risk stratification. Median follow-up was 3.9 years. Among high-risk patients who did not receive treatment in the SMM phase (n=71), 51 progressed by last follow-up; the MDEs included: bone lesions(37%), anemia(35%), hypercalcemia(8%), and renal failure(6%); 24% met MM criteria based on marrow plasmacytosis (≥60%) and/or free light chain ratio (>100); 45% had clinically significant MDEs (hypercalcemia, renal insufficiency, and/or bone lesions). MM diagnosis was made based on surveillance labs/imaging(45%), testing obtained due to provider suspicion for progression(14%), bone pain(20%), and hospitalization/ED presentations due to MM complications/symptoms(4%). The presentation was undocumented in 14%. A high proportion (45%) of patients with high-risk SMM on active surveillance develop end-organ damage at progression. About a quarter of patients who progress to MM are not diagnosed based on routine interval surveillance testing.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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