Staging looks at how much cancer is in your body and where it is. Tests like blood work (CBC, or complete blood count), urine tests, biopsy, X-ray, CT, and bone marrow biopsy may be done to help stage your cancer. Your providers need to know about your cancer and your health so that they can plan the best treatment for you.
Multiple myeloma (MM) is staged using the Revised International Staging System (RISS) based on:
Using the results of blood tests, urine tests, biopsies, and imaging tests, your myeloma will be given a stage. This will help guide your treatments. Below is a summary of the staging system. Talk to your provider about the stage of your cancer.
Treatment for multiple myeloma is based on many things, like your cancer stage, age, overall health, and test results.
Treatment also depends on which type of MM you are diagnosed with. The types are listed here:
Studies have helped us find out more about treating myeloma. Most patients do well with initial therapy and can live with myeloma as a chronic cancer for many years. Your treatment for active myeloma may include some or all of these:
Patients with smoldering (asymptomatic) myeloma (stage I) should be followed closely, without treatment. Research studies have found that treating asymptomatic myeloma does not improve long-term survival.
Chemotherapy is a type of medication that goes throughout your whole body to kill cancer cells. The ones used to treat multiple myeloma are cyclophosphamide, etoposide, doxorubicin, liposomal doxorubicin, melphalan, and bendamustine. Often, one of these drugs is given with another type of drug (like corticosteroids and immuno-modulating medication). Corticosteroids include dexamethasone and prednisone. An immune-modulating medication is one that changes your immune response to fight the cancer cells. Immuno-modulating medications include thalidomide, lenalidomide, and pomalidomide.
Other kinds of medication that can be used to treat MM include proteasome inhibitors, such as bortezomib, carfilzomib, and ixazomib. Medications called monoclonal antibodies can also be used, including daratumumab, daratumumab and hyaluronidase, isatuximab, and elotuzumab. Belantamab mafodotin-blmf is an antibody-drug conjugate, meaning a monoclonal antibody is attached to a chemotherapy drug.
Your provider will likely combine some medications to treat your MM, which is often called a regimen.
High-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplant (using your own stem cells) can be used in some cases. This may be used as the first-line therapy or after the myeloma has progressed while on other therapies. Having a transplant may not be the right treatment for patients who are older (over 65), if they have other health issues, or some DNA abnormalities.
There are three phases of stem cell transplant therapy:
Some studies are looking at the benefit of a second transplant (called tandem transplant) for patients who do not reach full remission after the first transplant. With this therapy, a second transplant is done within six months of the first. Up to half of the patients treated with tandem transplants may have a complete response, but this is still being studied. The use of an allogeneic transplant, one in which cells from a donor are used, is also being studied.
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a type of targeted therapy that helps your body use its own immune system to fight cancer cells. Immune cells, called T cells, are taken from your blood (called leukapheresis). These removed T cells are frozen, sent to a lab, and genetically changed to have certain receptors on their surface. These receptors help your T cells find and attach to proteins on the cancer cells. The lab will make many of these T cells. When these T cells are ready, you will receive chemotherapy to kill some of the cancer. The CAR T-cells are then given back to you through your blood. These T cells find remaining cancer cells, attach to them, and start to attack them. Idecabtagene vicleucel and ciltacabtagene autoleucel are CAR T-cell therapies that target the BCMA protein that is found on myeloma cells.
Many patients who have been treated for MM relapse at some point. This means that the MM has come back. Treatment for relapse depends on the treatment you have already had, how long you were in remission (cancer free), any side effects of treatments, and other health issues. Most often chemotherapy or immunotherapy medication is used.
Radiation therapy is the use of high energy x-rays to kill cancer cells. It can be used to treat a plasmacytoma which is a solid tumor made of myeloma cells. It can also be used to treat patients who have bone pain caused by myeloma may be treated with low-dose radiation. Your radiation oncologist will be able to talk to you about if radiation can be used as part of your treatment plan.
Often, the treatment for multiple myeloma includes supportive treatments. These treatments don’t treat the cancer, but the other health issues being caused by the cancer. These can include:
Talk to your care team about any questions you may have about your treatment for multiple myeloma.
You may be offered a clinical trial as part of your treatment plan. To find out more about current clinical trials, visit the OncoLink Clinical Trials Matching Services.
Your care team will make sure you are included in choosing your treatment plan. This can be overwhelming as you may be given a few options to choose from. It feels like an emergency, but you can take a few weeks to meet with different providers and think about your options and what is best for you. This is a personal decision. Friends and family can help you talk through the options and the pros and cons of each, but they cannot make the decision for you. You need to be comfortable with your decision – this will help you move on to the next steps. If you ever have any questions or concerns, be sure to call your team.
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