Background: The treatment of multiple myeloma, relatively
stagnant for many years, appears to be entering a promising era for improvement.
This paper reviews treatment interventions available for patients with
multiple myeloma to indicate a standard approach and to evaluate the spectrum
of current standard therapy.
Methods: The author reviews published literature on
the treatment of multiple myeloma. Both journal articles and
papers presented at national and international meetings are utilized.
Results: Intensive combination chemotherapy offers
relatively modest improvement over standard melphalan plus prednisone,
but the use of interferon for maintenance therapy lengthens response duration
and possibly survival. High-dose chemotherapy with stem-cell transplantation
is a relatively safe and effective treatment modality for patients under
70 years of age at first relapse. Studies in progress will determine
its role in first response consolidation. Use of hematopoietic growth factors,
prophylactic antibiotics, and bisphosphonate treatment of lytic bone disease
has diminished disease morbidity.
Conclusions: While cure of multiple myeloma remains
elusive and 10-year survival is still uncommon, newer treatment approaches
offer better control of disease manifestations and perhaps a real opportunity
to prolong functional life. Future treatments that will address minimal
residual disease may improve long-term survival.
Introduction
Multiple myeloma is a relatively common
hematologic malignancy with an annual incidence in the United States of
approximately 13,000 patients and a risk of over 4 cases per 100,000 per
year. It leads to progressive morbidity and eventual mortality by lowering
resistance to infection and by causing bone pain and skeletal destruction,
hypercalcemia, anemia, renal failure, and weight loss. In a minority of
patients, multiple myeloma also causes neuropathy, hyperviscosity, and
abnormalities in hemostasis. Although myeloma may be indolent or smoldering
at the time of diagnosis in 5% of patients, virtually all patients with
myeloma develop active symptomatic disease that requires treatment.
Goals and Strategy of Treatment
At present, cure is a realistic goal for only a small
minority of patients with multiple myeloma. Cure is not presently attainable
with standard chemotherapy, interferon, or high-dose chemotherapy followed
by autologous transplantation regimens with bone marrow or peripheral blood
stem cells. Cure or long-term disease-free survival is seen in less than
20% of patients under 55 years of age who have a related-donor match and
receive an allogeneic graft, either from bone marrow or peripheral blood
stem cells.
1,2 Treatment-related mortality for patients treated
with this approach still exceeds 50%.
For the vast majority of myeloma patients, the rational
goals of treatment are meaningful prolongation of life with durable relief
of pain and other disease symptoms, and protection of a normal performance
status and quality of life for as long as possible. These are usually achieved
through reduction of the myeloma tumor burden by establishing a plateau
phase and delaying disease progression. The strategy, therefore, is to
select a safe and well-tolerated treatment that can reliably produce objective
response of long duration or can at least delay relapse or progression
for many years. Treatment goals may be similar for a frail 75-year-old
patient and a younger, more fit patient, but the means to deliver these
goals may be quite different.
Choice of an Initial Treatment Regimen
For over three decades, a standard treatment for multiple
myeloma has been the alkylating agent melphalan usually administered with
prednisone (MP) as a moderate-dose, intermittent, oral outpatient regimen.
3
Numerous prospective trials demonstrated that MP yields a 50% response
rate based on the criteria of a 50% reduction in the concentration of myeloma
protein, a remission duration of 18 months, and a median survival of 24
to 30 months.
4-6 Complete responses are rarely obtained. Fifty
percent of patients present with myeloma that is clinically resistant to
MP. Even responders invariably develop resistance, usually within two years.
By five years, more than 80% of patients treated with MP have died. Because
of these unsatisfactory results, several multidrug regimens have been developed
in an effort to improve treatment efficacy. To evaluate these in comparison
to MP, it is necessary to focus on the treatment goals. Two-year survival
is achieved in 55% to 65% of patients with virtually any active regimen.
Similarly, 10-year survival is obtained in only 3% to 5% of patients, regardless
of the regimen selected for initial treatment. A reasonable target for
a patient with myeloma is to obtain good functional status and long-term
relief from pain with survival that exceeds five years. This seemingly
modest goal is actually ambitious, given that todays treatments achieve
five-year survival in fewer than 33% of patients.
7
Multidrug regimens used for the treatment of myeloma
are diverse with regard to drug selection, dose-intensity, and toxicity.
The most extensively studied multidrug regimens as shown in Table 1 include
VBMCP (vincristine, carmustine [BCNU], melphalan, cyclophosphamide, and
prednisone, patterned closely after the M-2 regimen8) and VMCP/VBAP
(vincristine, melphalan, cyclophosphamide, prednisone/vincristine, BCNU,
doxorubicin, prednisone). The original reports of the M-2 regimen indicated
a 78% response rate and 38-month median survival. An Eastern Cooperative
Oncology Group (ECOG) study comparing VBMCP to MP corroborated the superiority
of VBMCP over MP in producing objective responses (72% vs 51%, P<0.001)
and superior median response duration (24 vs 18 months, P=0.007)
but showed no difference in median survival (30 vs 28 months).6
Elderly bedridden patients had worse survival on VBMCP; however, the remaining
85% of patients had a significantly improved survival on VBMCP. The five-year
survival for patients treated with VBMCP was 26% compared with 19% for
MP. Hazard analysis reveals that the hazard of death is reduced by 29%
with VBMCP compared with MP from year 3 to 6 (P=0.02) after which
the apparent advantage dissipates. This treatment effect is most prominent
in patients with stage I-II disease. While the survival advantage with
VBMCP is marginal, a superiority of VBMCP over MP in producing and maintaining
objective responses is apparent. Over 90% of objective responses with either
regimen were associated with documented symptomatic improvement.7
Therefore, the higher response rate with VBMCP reflected superior palliative
treatment for most patients.
|
Table 1. -- Regimens
for Initial Treatment of Multiple Myeloma
|
| Reference |
Regimen |
Drugs |
Schedule |
Cycle (days) |
| 3, 4, 6 |
MP |
M |
8 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
28 |
| P |
75 mg po d 1-7 |
| |
| 6, 8 |
VBMCP |
V |
1.2 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
35 |
| B |
20 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
| M |
8 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
| C |
400 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
| P |
40 mg/m2 po d 1-7, then 20 mg/m2
po d 8-14 (cy 1) |
| |
| 9,10 |
VMCP/VBAP (alternating cycles) |
| VMCP |
V |
1 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
21 |
| M |
6 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
| C |
125 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
| P |
60 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
| |
| VBAP |
V |
1 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
21 |
| B |
30 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
| A |
30 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
| P |
60 mg/m2 po d 1-4 |
| |
| 11 |
ABCM (alternating cycles) |
| AB |
A |
30 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
21 |
| B |
30 mg/m2 iv d 1 |
| |
| CM |
C |
100 mg/m2 d 1-4 |
21 |
| M |
6 mg/m2 d 1-4 |
| |
| 13, 14, 15 |
VAD* |
V |
0.4 mg iv d 1-4 (continuous infusion) |
21 |
| A |
10 mg/m2 d 1-4 (continuous infusion) |
| D |
40 mg po d 1-4, 9-12 |
| |
| M = melphalan |
| P = prednisone |
| A = Adriamycin |
| B = BCNU |
| C = cyclophosphamide |
| D = dexamethasone |
| V = vincristine |
| |
| *Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole-DS recommended
twice daily, d 10-20. |
The Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) found that the
alternating cycle regimen VMCP/VBAP produced significantly more objective
responses than MP and that the more intense regimen had a survival advantage
as well.9 The median survival on a more recent VMCP/VBAP report
is 30 months, similar to VBMCP.10 A study reported by the Medical
Research Council (MRC) of a Great Britain trial comparing doxorubicin,
BCNU, cyclophosphamide, and melphalan (ABCM) to MP (or melphalan alone)
also showed significant survival advantage for the more intensive ABCM
regimen.11 ABCM is essentially the VMCP/VBAP regimen with the
vincristine and prednisone deleted.
These three multi-institutional controlled trials
represent more than 1,300 patients randomized to either single-agent melphalan
with or without prednisone or to a more intensive combination chemotherapy
regimen. They demonstrate an improved response rate and duration for the
more intensive regimen over MP and at least a modest survival benefit expressed
as a consistently higher rate of long-term survival (Table 2).
|
Table 2. -- Combination
Therapy vs M/MP: Three Major Studies
|
| Reference |
Group |
Combination |
Control |
| |
| 10 |
SWOG (n=233) |
VMCP/VBAP |
MP |
| |
| |
OR (SWOG criteria*) |
53% |
32% |
| |
|
|
| 5-yr survival |
30% |
19% |
| |
| 11 |
MRC (n=630) |
MC/BA |
M |
| |
| |
OR (plateau) |
61% |
49% |
| |
| 5-yr survival |
24% |
17% |
| |
| 6 |
ECOG (n=438) |
VBMCP |
MP |
| |
| |
OR |
72% |
51% |
| |
| OR (SWOG criteria) |
58% |
38% |
| |
| 5-yr survival |
26% |
19% |
| |
| *SWOG OR criteria required a 75% decrease
in M-protein synthetic index. |
| |
| V = vincristine |
A = Adriamycin |
| M = melphalan |
SWOG = Southwest Oncology Group |
| C = cyclophosphamide |
MRC = Medical Research Council |
| P = prednisone |
ECOG = Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group |
| B = BCNU |
OR = objective response |
Other trials, mostly smaller, failed to show a therapeutic
advantage of various combination therapy regimens over MP. An attempt was
made to resolve this issue through a meta-analysis based on 18 published
trials composed of 3,814 patients comparing combination chemotherapy regimens
to MP.12 Two-year survival was 55.5% with combination chemotherapy
and 57.5% with MP. Based on this finding, the meta-analysis was interpreted
as showing no overall difference in efficacy between combination chemotherapy
and MP.
The meta-analysis was carefully performed, but two
problems argue against using its findings to determine the relative merits
of MP vs more intensive multi-agent chemotherapy. First, because of the
variable follow-up available, the meta-analysis was entirely based on two-year
survival. As already discussed, this is not the primary goal of treatment
for myeloma. Comparison is more useful when based on endpoints that represent
the central treatment goals. In this case, longer-term survival (eg, five
years) would have been a better endpoint. Quality of life or durable control
of disease manifestations would also be pertinent, but such data are not
available in most clinical trial reports. The second problem pertains to
the way in which the issue is framed. Combination chemotherapy includes
a diverse group of treatment regimens. Many are more intensive than MP,
but some are equal and a few may actually represent less intensive treatment
than the MP to which they are compared. The published meta-analysis includes
all published randomized trials that compared combination chemotherapy
with MP. Selection of trials was not readily possible within the constraints
of meta-analysis without risk of introducing bias. However, the clinically
relevant issue is not whether combination chemotherapy is superior to melphalan
or MP. Rather, it is to determine whether more intensive treatment
regimens composed of combinations of drugs are a better treatment choice
than standard MP or melphalan alone.
The problem of attempting a clinically relevant meta-analysis
that compares the more intensive combination chemotherapy regimens to MP
without introducing bias may not be soluble. At this time, available data
suggest that for patients who can tolerate it, treatment with a moderately
intensive combination chemotherapy regimen may offer the surest way to
reach and maintain a plateau without undue toxicity and may offer a modest
advantage in long-term survival.
The VAD regimen consisting of vincristine, doxorubicin,
and dexamethasone (Table 1) has been reported to yield response rates comparable
to other combination chemotherapy regimens in previously untreated patients.13-15
Two positive attributes of this regimen are its rapid onset of response
and its tendency to cause less damage to bone marrow progenitors. Follow-up
is still relatively short, and it is not yet proven whether VAD produces
long-term results comparable or better than those of the other intensive
combination regimens. Its tendency to spare marrow progenitors recommends
VAD for patients in whom autologous bone marrow or stem-cell transplant
is contemplated.
Interferon
The role of interferon (IFN) and high-dose therapy with
bone marrow or peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation in myeloma is
well reviewed elsewhere in this issue.
16 I will briefly address
their impact on current standard therapy. Most clinical trials in myeloma
have utilized recombinant interferon(IFN)-
a. IFN is active as a single
agent in patients with newly diagnosed myeloma and in patients with relapsed
or refractory disease.
17,18 However, the response rates are
low -- inferior to those obtained with standard chemotherapy -- and the
role of IFN as single-agent induction is limited to occasional patients
with relapsed or refractory disease.
Although IFN is weak when used as a single-induction
agent, it has been combined with VBMCP as alternating cycles to increase
the rate of complete response (CR) and the response duration.19
Another study combining MP with IFN given simultaneously and mid-cycle
showed a response benefit with IFN and an apparent survival increase in
some patient subsets.20 However, neither study observed an overall
survival difference. Others using a lower dose of IFN found no differences
at all.21 A survival benefit, if any, from IFN used in induction
chemotherapy is likely to be slight, unless applicable to subset of patients
that has yet to be defined.
Will the improved response duration and increased
rate of CR with IFN induction regimens be confirmed, and are these benefits
of sufficient magnitude to be worth the added toxicity and expense? A meta-analysis
by the Myeloma Trialists and an ongoing phase III ECOG study address the
issues of response duration, CR rate, and overall survival. The meta-analysis
results will be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology
meeting in May 1998. At present, it seems clear that IFN does not have
an established role in the standard induction therapy of multiple myeloma,
but the possibility that it may be an effective way to induce many more
CRs is a promising lead for future treatment development.
Most trials in maintenance therapy indicate that
IFN prolongs response duration. Some show significantly increased survival,
others show a non-significant trend in that direction, and some show no
difference.22 Few, if any, suggest a decreased survival with
IFN. The recently reported meta-analysis demonstrated a significant benefit
in the form of improved relapse-free survival and overall survival for
patients treated with IFN, either in induction or maintenance-phase therapy.23
A reasonable approach would be to administer maintenance-phase IFN at 3
MU/m2 for 24 months or until relapse.
Duration of Therapy and Maintenance
Maintenance chemotherapy increases response duration
but not survival.
24-26 Prolonged chemotherapy in myeloma carries
a substantial risk on leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome that could
be related to cumulative exposure.
27 Interferon maintenance
appears to improve response duration and may prolong survival. Furthermore,
there is no evidence that IFN maintenance is leukemogenic in contrast to
prolonged administration of most chemotherapy regimens. Therefore, the
choice of IFN maintenance seems to represent a reasonable option to consider
for patients who can tolerate it without undue toxicity, particularly fatigue.
Issues remain to be clarified regarding what types of myeloma are associated
with the greatest IFN benefit and whether IFN responsiveness is related
in any way to tumor burden. Ultimately, the decision regarding IFN maintenance
will be based on whether the magnitude of benefit is worth the toxicity
and expense to the individual patient.
High-Dose Therapy With Autologous Stem-Cell Rescue in the
Standard Treatment of Myeloma
Theoretically, high-dose therapy with alkylating agents
or alkylating agents plus total body irradiation might eradicate the myeloma
clone or reduce it to levels that would allow a lengthy CR. Unfortunately,
data available at this time suggest the possibility that no myeloma patients
are cured with current autologous transplantation techniques. Data reported
by the Intergroupe Francais du Myelome (IFM), recently updated, demonstrate
improved CR rate, event-free survival, and overall survival with an autologous
bone marrow transplant regimen vs conventional chemotherapy as initial
induction treatment.
28,29 Ongoing studies by another group in
France
30 and by the US Intergroup trial are both evaluating
whether high-dose therapy with autologous stem-cell rescue is better when
applied early in first remission or after first relapse. Overall, the median
survival is close to five years in most reports with early high-dose therapy
with autologous stem-cell rescue, including the IFM report. It is therefore
interesting that when the Spanish Cooperative Group for the Study of Hematological
Malignancies Treatment (PETHEMA) retrospectively examined their potential
candidates for early high-dose therapy with stem-cell rescue who were treated
with conventional chemotherapy, they also found a five-year median survival.
31
The role of high-dose therapy with stem-cell rescue
early in first remission is not yet clear but might be resolved when the
results of ongoing studies are available. With improvements in supportive
care, the procedure is becoming safer at qualified centers. If the expense
continues to decrease and the efficacy is established as superior to conventional
chemotherapy, high-dose therapy might be a reasonable four- to six-week
alternative induction of plateau phase that would provide more frequent
complete responses, and it could prove to be easier and possibly safer
than one to two years of conventional treatment.
The current lack of curative potential highlights
the importance of studying the biology and treatment of the minimal residual
disease (MRD) that remains after induction of CR. With high-dose therapy
as an increasingly effective debulking mechanism, new approaches to more
effective control of MRD will lead to prolonged objective response and
CR, improved survival, and possibly cure.
Relapsed or Refractory Disease
Patients who undergo relapse six to 12 months after
discontinuing therapy are usually successfully reinduced with the original
regimen.
32 The VAD regimen is also effective in this setting.
However, second remissions of greater than 12 months are the exception.
In patients who are suitable candidates, high-dose therapy with stem-cell
rescue can be highly effective and is perhaps more likely to yield a response
duration that exceeds one year. It should be strongly considered in young
patients in first relapse and in patients under 70 years of age who have
disease progression through their initial induction regimen. It is not
likely to be effective in patients with late myeloma who have been exposed
to extensive treatment with multiple regimens.
33
VAD is the treatment chosen for most patients with
relapsed myeloma.13-15,34 VAD has been given as three- or four-week
cycles. The dexamethasone may be limited to the first four days of each
cycle, but it is frequently given in four-day courses beginning on day
1 and day 9 (and, in four-week cycles, on day 17). The number of dexamethasone
courses per cycle should be diminished once response is reached. Some have
recommended prophylactic antibiotics with VAD.14 Response rates
to VAD after first relapse are approximately 40%. It is a good regimen
to use to induce a second response if high-dose therapy with autologous
stem-cell transplantation is planned.
High doses of alkylating agents35,36 or
cortico-steroids37 have been used with some short-term success
in patients with resistant myeloma. High-dose cyclophosphamide at 600 mg/m2
daily on days 1 through 4 should be used with granulocyte colony-stimulating
factor (G-CSF) support starting on day 5. This regimen is relatively platelet
sparing and can be given as repeated in four- to five-week cycles. G-CSF
could theoretically improve the efficacy of high-dose cyclophosphamide
that, as originally reported, was given for only one or two cycles prior
to the availability of growth factor support.35 For patients
with marked bone marrow impairment, high-dose methylprednisolone may provide
good palliation. In this regimen, methylprednisolone is administered at
a dose of 2 g intravenously three times a week for eight weeks, then at
2 g weekly. The response rate in a small series of heavily pretreated patients
was 35%.37 Interferon, either alone or in combination with corticosteroids,
has also been effective in some patients with resistant disease.14,38
While current efforts are actively evaluating agents designed to overcome
multidrug resistance, such agents are not yet part of standard treatment.
Supportive Care
Recent advances have emerged in three important areas
of supportive care of myeloma patients: bone marrow failure, infection,
and skeletal destruction.
Bone marrow failure, particularly in the form of
anemia and later treatment- and disease-induced neutropenia, has a major
deleterious impact on the well being of the patient and on the course of
disease. Anemia occurs in most myeloma patients, and when severe, it markedly
contributes to weakness, fatigue, and loss of function. Previously, many
myeloma patients became dependent on transfusions. It is now possible to
treat patients with severe anemia with recombinant human erythropoietin
at a dose of 150 to 300 U/kg subcutaneously three times per week and achieve
good responses in 50% or more.39 It is often possible to avoid
the need for blood transfusions. Response rates are best in patients with
low or suboptimally elevated levels of endogenous erythropoietin. Neutropenia,
usually mild at diagnosis, frequently supervenes and becomes chronic as
a result of treatment toxicity and progressive disease. It may severely
limit the ability to deliver effective doses of chemotherapy. When this
occurs, the prophylactic use of G-CSF may allow effective chemotherapy
and can be crucial in allowing the patient to tolerate regimens such as
high-dose cyclophosphamide.
Patients with multiple myeloma are at increased risk
for infection. Clinically significant infections occur at an average rate
of nearly 1.5 infections per year over the clinical course of myeloma.
During the first two months of initial chemotherapy, the incidence is at
least twofold higher. These early infections have a high mortality rate,
and patients who recover often have severe disruption of their chemotherapy
regimen that diminishes the likelihood of a good response. In a prospective,
randomized study involving 57 patients, prophylactic administration of
a double-strength tables of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole every 12 hours
for the first 60 days of initial chemotherapy decreased the bacterial infection
rate by 88%.40 Studies are currently in progress to confirm
this finding and to compare trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole to ciprofloxacin
or ofloxacin. Pending the results of these, it is reasonable to use prophylactic
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for the first two months of initial chemotherapy
in patients who are not sulfa-allergic.
Skeletal destruction is a major cause of morbidity,
functional loss, and mortality in multiple myeloma. In patients with lytic
bone disease, treatment with 90 mg of intravenous pamidronate (four-hour
infusion) administered monthly has been shown to reduce the incidence of
skeletal events including pathologic fracture, as well as the need for
radiotherapy or surgery to bone and spinal cord compression.41,42
The reduction in skeletal events is almost 50% and persists over the 21
months of observation to date. Pamidronate is also useful in the treatment
of hypercalcemia. Further work in progress with newer, more powerful bisphosphonates
promises continued improvement in the control of myeloma bone disease.
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From the Virginia Piper Cancer Institute, Minneapolis,
Minn.
Address reprint requests to Martin M. Oken, MD, Director,
Virginia Piper Cancer Institute, Abbott Northwestern
Hospital,
800 East 28th St, Minneapolis, MN 55407-3799.
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