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Treating classical Hodgkin lymphoma: Spotlight on targeted therapies
with Gilles Salles, Paul Bröckelmann, and Ann S. LaCasce
Saturday, November 2, 2024
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Multiple Myeloma (MM) is predominantly a disease of old age, affecting 35-40% of patients over the age of 75. Patients are treated according to their suitability for bone marrow transplant. Historically, this decision was based on age, with patients older than 75 years considered non-eligible for transplant, and those younger than 75 and in general good health eligible for a transplant. However, with an increasing awareness that patients should be assessed for treatment on an individual basis, rather than just age, improved means of identifying patients that are frail and unsuitable for transplant have been devised. In addition, since many of the clinical trials have excluded patients over 75, treatment decisions are difficult for this age group as efficacy data is limited.
In a review written for the journal Current Opinion in Oncology, Sonja Zweegman from the Department of Hematology, VU University Cancer Center Amsterdam, The Netherlands, along with colleagues Monika Engelhardt and Alessandra Larocca, outlined the need for improved measures in order to identify frail patients, and explained the changes now in place for assessment, and the treatment decisions that might follow.
With an increasingly aging population, studies for new therapies need to be extended into the elderly population with results stratified using the new indicators for a measure of fit, intermediate-fit and frail. Identifying patients in these categories will help steer appropriate treatment options, to limit toxicity and discontinuation, and improve quality of life. Further practical details regarding the frailty index can be found in the updated ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines.
To describe how to better identify frail multiple myeloma patients and to treat them appropriately.
Proteasome inhibitors, such as bortezomib, carfilzomib, and ixazomib, and immunomodulatory agents (IMiDs), such as thalidomide, lenalidomide, and pomalidomide, have significantly improved the outcome of multiple myeloma patients in the last decade. However, both in clinical trials and in daily clinical practice, elderly multiple myeloma patients have shown lesser benefit. This is mainly due to less stringent use of proteasome inhibitors and IMiDs, increased toxicity, and subsequent early discontinuation of therapy in elderly.
Multiple myeloma typically affects elderly patients. Approximately one-third of patients are older than 75 years at diagnosis. Moreover, at least 30% are frail, both due to disease-related symptoms and (age-related) decline in physical capacity, presence of comorbidities, frailty, polypharmacy, nutritional status, and cognitive impairment. Treatment regimens that are investigated in clinical trials for transplant-ineligible patients have largely been investigated in fit, rather than frail patients, the latter being typically excluded or highly underrepresented therein. Data on the feasibility and efficacy of current standards of care are therefore lacking in frail patients. Preliminary data suggest a higher toxicity and discontinuation rate, loss of efficacy, and impaired quality of life in frail patients. Geriatric assessment helps to identify frail patients according to their functional and cognitive status. Both the International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG)-frailty index and Revised Myeloma Comorbidity Index constitute recently proposed algorithms that easily identify intermediate-fit and frail patients. Ongoing and future clinical trials, specifically designed for frail patients, will hopefully define frailty-directed treatment selection.
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