Reuters Health Information: Treatment responses remain poor in IgM light-chain amyloidosis
Treatment responses remain poor in IgM light-chain amyloidosis
Last Updated: 2016-04-27
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Only about one in seven
patients with immunoglobulin M (IgM)-related light chain
amyloidosis show complete or very good partial responses to
treatment, researchers report.
"IgM amyloidosis is different from AL in general," Dr.
Ashutosh D. Wechalekar, from University College London Medical
School, UK, told Reuters Health by email. "I hope this report
will encourage physicians to use appropriate hematopathology to
confirm the underlying clonal diagnosis, help them to
risk-stratify these patients using the new model, and consider
appropriate therapies to the underlying bone marrow pathology."
Until now, IgM amyloid light-chain (AL) amyloidosis has
been classified with other forms of amyloidosis, although some
have suggested that its clinical features distinguish it from
non-IgM AL amyloidosis.
Dr. Wechalekar's team reported the utility of prognostic
and response criteria in a series of 250 patients with IgM AL
amyloidosis, as well as the clinical characteristics and
outcomes of these patients.
Tissue involvement included the heart in 45%, the kidney in
68%, soft tissue in 35%, and the liver in 17% of patients,
according to the April 25 Journal of Clinical Oncology report.
Most patients (52%) had a clearly identified
lymphoproliferative disorder, and in nearly a third of these
patients its diagnosis predated the diagnosis of AL amyloidosis.
Patients were treated with 22 different combinations used
as first-line therapy. Rituximab in combination with bortezomib
or combination chemotherapy was the most frequent regimen since
2010.
Although 57% of treated patients achieved a hematologic
response, only 9% had a very good partial response (VGPR) and
only 5% had a complete response.
Median overall survival was 47.9 months and was better in
patients with no identifiable clonal infiltrate in the bone
marrow (54 months) than in those who had lymphoid infiltrate (44
months) or plasma cell-predominant infiltrate (23 months).
Multivariate analysis allowed the creation of a new risk
model that incorporates N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide
(NT-proBNP), troponin T, liver involvement, and presence of
neuropathy. Increasing numbers of abnormalities in these factors
are associated with declining median survival.
"Thus far, we have focused on cardiac disease," Dr.
Wechalekar said. "This model alerts us to the fact the
neuropathic disease in context of IgM is equally important."
Organ response rates in these patients (cardiac 5%, liver
27%, and renal 18%) were much lower than those reported among
IgA and/or IgG AL amyloidosis patients.
"The goal of therapy in AL amyloidosis is generally a VGPR
or better," Dr. Wechalekar concluded. "In patients with
neuropathy, there is now all the more reason to use agents that
will lead to a VGPR or better - and switching therapies to reach
this goal is important."
"Currently, autologous stem-cell transplantation and
bortezomib-based treatment regimens seem to be associated with
best responses, although the prolonged time to next treatment
seen with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab raises
the important issue of accurately targeting the lymphoid
component of the clone for longer term disease control," the
researchers noted. "Novel targeted therapies need to be further
explored in this condition."
"An international tissue and data registry would help to
broaden the understanding of IgM-related AL amyloidosis," they
added.
Dr. Vaishali Sanchorawala, director of Boston Medical
Center's Autologous Stem Cell Transplant Program, told Reuters
Health by email that the proposed risk model is "too complicated
and useless, as all patients do require treatment and none is
indolent not requiring treatment."
"Survival, as with other types of amyloidosis, is related
to deep hematologic responses and absence of cardiac
involvement," Dr. Sanchorawala said.
The authors reported no funding. Eight coauthors reported
disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1YUeZIm
J Clin Oncol 2016.
|