For establishing the true effect of different response categories in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) treated with autologous stem cell transplantation, we evaluated, after a median follow-up of 153 months, 344 patients with MM who received a transplant between 1989 and 1998. Overall survival (OS) at 12 years was 35% in complete response (CR) patients, 22% in near complete response (nCR), 16% in very good partial response (VGPR), and 16% in partial response (PR) groups. Significant differences in OS and progression-free survival were found between CR and nCR groups (P = .01 and P = .002, respectively), between CR and VGPR groups (P = .0001 and P = .003), or between CR and PR groups (P = .003 and P = < 10(-5)); no differences were observed between the nCR and VGPR groups (P = .2 and P = .9) or between these groups and the PR group (P = .1 and P = .8). A landmark study found a plateau phase in OS after 11 years; 35% patients in the CR group and 11% in the nCR+VGPR+PR group are alive at 17 years; 2 cases had relapsed in the nCR+VGPR+PR group. In conclusion, MM achieving CR after autologous stem cell transplantation is a central prognostic factor. The relapse rate is low in patients with > 11 years of follow-up, possibly signifying a cure for patients in CR.
Vascular calcifications are frequent in hemodialysis patients. Its incidence ranges from 25 to 67% depending of different series. Thirty hemodialysis patients were selected from a dialysis population of 150 patients. These 30 patients were divided into two groups: group I included 15 hemodialysis patients with severe secondary hyperparathyroidism and severe, roentgenographically visible diffuse vascular calcifications, and group II included 15 other hemodialysis patients with moderate hyperparathyroidism without radiographic evidence of arterial calcifications. The control group comprised 20 normal volunteers. In all patients, measurements of protein C activity, free protein S and intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) were performed. Statistical analysis showed that free protein S in the patients of group I had a tendency to be lower than in the patients of group II (p < 0.01) and the control group (p < 0.001). We did not find significant differences in free protein S between group II and control group patients nor a significant correlation between intact PTH and free protein S in groups I and II. Protein C activity was found to be in the normal range in both groups. Free protein S deficiency in patients of group I would suggest a synthesis defect by impaired endothelial cells – due to vascular calcifications (?). Free protein S deficiency could increase the risk of thrombotic complications in these patients.
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