Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2019)

High-Risk Multiple Myeloma: Integrated Clinical and Omics Approach Dissects the Neoplastic Clone and the Tumor Microenvironment

  • Antonio Giovanni Solimando,
  • Matteo Claudio Da Vià,
  • Sebastiano Cicco,
  • Patrizia Leone,
  • Giuseppe Di Lernia,
  • Donato Giannico,
  • Vanessa Desantis,
  • Maria Antonia Frassanito,
  • Arcangelo Morizio,
  • Julia Delgado Tascon,
  • Assunta Melaccio,
  • Ilaria Saltarella,
  • Giuseppe Ranieri,
  • Roberto Ria,
  • Leo Rasche,
  • K. Martin Kortüm,
  • Andreas Beilhack,
  • Vito Racanelli,
  • Angelo Vacca,
  • Hermann Einsele

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8070997
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. 997

Abstract

Read online

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a genetically heterogeneous disease that includes a subgroup of 10−15% of patients facing dismal survival despite the most intensive treatment. Despite improvements in biological knowledge, MM is still an incurable neoplasia, and therapeutic options able to overcome the relapsing/refractory behavior represent an unmet clinical need. The aim of this review is to provide an integrated clinical and biological overview of high-risk MM, discussing novel therapeutic perspectives, targeting the neoplastic clone and its microenvironment. The dissection of the molecular determinants of the aggressive phenotypes and drug-resistance can foster a better tailored clinical management of the high-risk profile and therapy-refractoriness. Among the current clinical difficulties in MM, patients’ management by manipulating the tumor niche represents a major challenge. The angiogenesis and the stromal infiltrate constitute pivotal mechanisms of a mutual collaboration between MM and the non-tumoral counterpart. Immuno-modulatory and anti-angiogenic therapy hold great efficacy, but variable and unpredictable responses in high-risk MM. The comprehensive understanding of the genetic heterogeneity and MM high-risk ecosystem enforce a systematic bench-to-bedside approach. Here, we provide a broad outlook of novel druggable targets. We also summarize the existing multi-omics-based risk profiling tools, in order to better select candidates for dual immune/vasculogenesis targeting.

Keywords