Summary
The incidence, characteristics and risk factors for the development of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) were evaluated among 303 myeloma patients. Only patients who received bisphosphonates developed ONJ (28/254; 11%). Zoledronic acid produced 9·5‐fold greater risk for developing ONJ than pamidronate alone (P = 0·042) and 4·5‐fold greater risk than subsequent use of pamidronate + zoledronic acid (P = 0·018). Use of thalidomide and number of bisphosphonate infusions also increased the risk for ONJ by 2·4‐fold (P = 0·043), and 4·9‐fold respectively (P = 0·012). ONJ developed earlier among patients receiving zoledronic acid. Our data indicates that administration of zoledronic acid for more than 2 years or in combination with thalidomide requires caution in myeloma.
Transplant‐ineligible relapsed/refractory (rr) diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients represent an unmet medical need. Polatuzumab vedotin (Pola), an anti‐CD79b antibody‐drug‐conjugate (ADG), with bendamustine‐ rituximab(BR) has recently gained approval for these patients, both in the USA and Europe, based on the GO29365 phase IIb trial. Real‐life data with Pola are extremely limited. We report the outcomes of 61 Greek patients, who received Pola‐(B)R mainly within a compassionate use program. Treatment was given for up to six 21‐day cycles. Bendamustine was omitted in three cases due to previous short‐lived responses. Fourty‐nine rrDLBCL(efficacy cohort‐EC) and 58 rr aggressive B‐NHL (safety cohort‐SC) patients received at least 1 Pola‐BR cycle. Twenty‐one (43%) patients of the EC responded with 12/49 (25%) CR and 9/49 (18%) PR as best response. Median progression–free survival, overall survival and duration of response were 4.0, 8.5, and 8.5 months respectively, while 55% of patients experienced a grade ≥3 adverse event, mainly hematologic. Treatment discontinuations and death during treatment were mainly due to disease progression. Twenty‐two (41%) patients received further treatment; 11/22 are still alive, including one after CAR‐T cells, and two after stem cell transplantation. Our data confirm that Pola‐BR is a promising treatment for rrDLBCL patients, inducing an adequate response rate with acceptable toxicity. Pola‐BR could be used as bridging therapy before further consolidative treatments.
The aim of the study was to evaluate the role of hypochromic erythrocytes (HYPO%) compared to "traditional" and novel markers of iron status and erythropoiesis in recognizing iron-restricted erythropoiesis (IRE) and predicting response to erythropoietin (rHuEPO) in anemic patients with myeloma and lymphoma. Forty-one newly diagnosed patients who received epoetin-beta at a subcutaneous weekly dose of 30,000 IU for 6 weeks were studied. Response to rHuEPO was observed in 27 patients (65.8%). Twelve non-responders received, additionally, 200 mg of IV iron sucrose, weekly, for 4 weeks. Evaluation of markers was performed at baseline and on weeks 1, 2 and 6 for all patients and also on weeks 7-10 for non-responders to rHuEPO. Baseline HYPO%, at a cut-off value of <5%, and an increment in reticulocyte absolute number (RETICS-AB) >or= 50,000/microl and reticulocyte hematocrit (RETICS-Hct) >or= 50%, between baseline and week 2, were independent predictive factors for response to rHuEPO. We found that these markers had superior predictive value for response to rHuEPO than four widely used predictive models. Furthermore, a baseline HYPO% count of above 5% proved superior over serum ferritin < 100 ng/ml and transferrin saturation < 20% in recognizing IRE. In conclusion, baseline HYPO% either alone or in combination with RETICS-AB or RETICS-Hct after 2 weeks of rHuEPO treatment could be reliably used in predicting response to rHuEPO. Additionally, HYPO% has proved a reliable marker for recognizing IRE before rHuEPO treatment and, thus, could be used for identifying patients who will benefit from IV iron supplementation.
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