Haematologica (Dec 2020)

Autologous stem cell transplantation is safe and effective for fit, older myeloma patients: exploratory results from the Myeloma XI trial

  • Charlotte Pawlyn,
  • David Cairns,
  • Tom Menzies,
  • John Jones,
  • Matthew Jenner,
  • Gordon Cook,
  • Kevin Boyd,
  • Mark Drayson,
  • Martin Kaiser,
  • Roger Owen,
  • Walter Gregory,
  • Gareth Morgan,
  • Graham Jackson,
  • Faith Davies

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2020.262360
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 1

Abstract

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Autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) remains the standard of care for consolidation after induction therapy for eligible patients with newly diagnosed myeloma. In recent clinical trials comparing ASCT to delayed ASCT, patients aged over 65 were excluded. In real-world practice stem cell transplants are not restricted to those aged under 65 and clinicians decide on transplant eligibility based on a patient’s fitness rather than a strict age cut-off. Data from the UK NCRI Myeloma XI trial, a large phase III randomized controlled trial with pathways for transplant-eligible and -ineligible patients, were used in an exploratory analysis to examine the efficacy and toxicity of ASCT in older patients including an analysis using an age-matched population to compare outcomes for patients receiving similar induction therapy with or without ASCT. Older patients within the transplant-eligible pathway were less likely to undergo stem cell harvest at the end of induction than younger patients and of those patients undergoing ASCT there was a reduction in progression-free survival associated with increasing age. ASCT in older patients was well tolerated with no difference in morbidity or mortality between patients aged <65, 65-69 and 70-75 years. In an age-matched population of patients including those in both the transplant- eligible and -ineligible pathways there was a significant advantage associated with undergoing ASCT with increases in progression-free survival (hazard ratio 0.41, P<0.0001) and overall survival (hazard ratio 0.51, P<0.0001), which persisted even after adjustment for baseline covariates including those related to frailty and response to induction. These findings support the use of ASCT for selected fit, older myeloma patients. EudraCT number, 2009-010956-93