PurposeVitamin D deficiency is frequent in patients with multiple myeloma (MM), however, its prognostic relevance in MM was rather inconclusive. We first investigated the association of vitamin D deficiency with abnormal bone and lipid metabolism in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM), and next assessed the impact of serum ratio of vitamin D to carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (β-CTX) on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall free survival (OS) in patients with NDMM.MethodsThe data of 431 consecutive patients with NDMM at Beijing Jishuitan Hospital from September 2013 to December 2022 were collected and retrospectively reviewed through our electronic medical record system. The measurement of 25-hydroxyvitamin D in the blood is an indicator of an individual’s overall vitamin D status.ResultsThe serum levels of vitamin D were negatively correlated with β-CTX in NDMM patients. Of note, positive correlation between vitamin D and cholesterol levels in the serum was found in this study. The cohort (n = 431) was divided into two groups based on the serum ratio of vitamin D to β-CTX. Compared to the group with a higher vitamin D to β-CTX ratio, the group with a lower vitamin D to β-CTX ratio (n = 257, 60%) exhibited hypocholesterolemia, inferior PFS and OS, along with increased cases of ISS stage-III and R-ISS stage-III, a higher number of plasma cells in the bone marrow, and elevated serum calcium levels. Consistent with this, multivariate analysis confirmed that the vitamin D to β-CTX ratio was an independent unfavorable indicator for survival in NDMM patients.ConclusionOur data demonstrated the ratio of vitamin D to β-CTX in the serum is a unique biomarker for NDMM patients to identify the high-risk cases with poor prognosis, which is superior to vitamin D itself for predicting PFS and OS in NDMM. Also, it is worth mentioning that our data on the connection between vitamin D deficiency and hypocholesterolemia might help clarify novel mechanistic aspects of myeloma development.
Maintenance treatment is a pivotal part in the whole process management of multiple myeloma (MM), which further deepens response and improves survival. However, evidence of maintenance in non-transplant MM patients is inadequate in real-world practice. Here, we retrospectively analyzed the efficacy and survival of 375 non-transplant MM patients from 11 centers between 2010 and 2021 in north China. After a median of seven cycles of front-line regimens, there were 141, 79, and 155 patients receiving lenalidomide maintenance (L-MT), bortezomib maintenance (B-MT), or thalidomide maintenance (T-MT), respectively. Patients on L-MT and B-MT had significantly greater proportions of high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities (HRCAs) detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), which was defined as 1q21 gain, 17p deletion, adverse immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) translocations. Although the progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were comparable among the three groups, L-MT and B-MT remedied the negative impact of HRCAs on survival (PFS of patients with HRCAs vs. patients without HRCAs: L-MT, 26.9 vs. 39.2 months, p=0.19; B-MT, 20.0 vs. 29.7 months, p=0.36; OS not reached in all groups). Patients with HRCAs in the T-MT group presented inferior clinical outcomes compared to standard-risk patients (PFS, 12.1 vs. 22.8 months, p=0.02, HR=1.8, 95% CI 1.0–3.4; OS, 54.9 months vs. NR, p<0.001, HR=3.2, 95% CI 1.5–7.0). Achieving complete response (CR) after induction therapy led to superior PFS compared to other degrees of response, regardless of maintenance medication. Furthermore, maintenance duration over 24 months correlated with favorable survival. Due to the large gap of transplant eligibility in China, optimizing maintenance therapy is important for non-transplant MM patients. In this real-world multi-centered study, our findings suggest that clinicians prefer to prescribe lenalidomide or bortezomib as maintenance therapy in high-risk settings, which are superior to thalidomide in non-transplant MM patients. Achievement of CR and maintenance duration over 2 years are positive factors that influence survival.
BACKGROUND Solitary plasmacytoma and unicentric Castleman disease (UCD) are rare lymphoproliferative disorders characterized by monoclonal plasma cells and a single set of locally enlarged lymph nodes, respectively. CASE SUMMARY A 48-year-old Han Chinese man presented to our department with a neck mass and progressive foreign body sensation in his throat. 18 F-FDG positron emission tomography revealed focally increased radioactivity centered around the hyoid, and computed tomography (CT) revealed osteolytic lesions. Histopathology revealed Castleman-like features and CD138/CD38-positive mature plasma cells. Systemic work-up ruled out the possibility of POEMS syndrome, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma, leading to a final diagnosis of solitary hyoid plasmacytoma with UCD. The patient underwent partial hyoid resection and selective neck dissection, followed by intensity-modulated radiotherapy. 99mTc-MDP single-photon emission computed tomography/CT reevaluation showed neither local recurrence nor distant bone metastasis at the 40-mo follow-up. CONCLUSION The diagnostic process and differential diagnosis of this rare case provided valuable educational information to clinicians.
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