Haematologica (Jun 2015)

Health-related quality-of-life in patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma in the FIRST trial: lenalidomide plus low-dose dexamethasone versus melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide

  • Michel Delforge,
  • Leonard Minuk,
  • Jean-Claude Eisenmann,
  • Bertrand Arnulf,
  • Letizia Canepa,
  • Alberto Fragasso,
  • Serge Leyvraz,
  • Christian Langer,
  • Yousef Ezaydi,
  • Dan T. Vogl,
  • Pilar Giraldo-Castellano,
  • Sung-Soo Yoon,
  • Charles Zarnitsky,
  • Martine Escoffre-Barbe,
  • Bernard Lemieux,
  • Kevin Song,
  • Nizar Jacques Bahlis,
  • Shien Guo,
  • Mara Silva Monzini,
  • Annette Ervin-Haynes,
  • Vanessa Houck,
  • Thierry Facon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2014.120121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 100, no. 6

Abstract

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We compared the health-related quality-of-life of patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma aged over 65 years or transplant-ineligible in the pivotal, phase III FIRST trial. Patients received: i) continuous lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone until disease progression; ii) fixed cycles of lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone for 18 months; or iii) fixed cycles of melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide for 18 months. Data were collected using the validated questionnaires (QLQ-MY20, QLQ-C30, and EQ-5D). The analysis focused on the EQ-5D utility value and six domains pre-selected for their perceived clinical relevance. Lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone, and melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide improved patients’ health-related quality-of-life from baseline over the duration of the study across all pre-selected domains of the QLQ-C30 and EQ-5D. In the QLQ-MY20, lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone demonstrated a significantly greater reduction in the Disease Symptoms domain compared with melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide at Month 3, and significantly lower scores for QLQ-MY20 Side Effects of Treatment at all post-baseline assessments except Month 18. Linear mixed-model repeated-measures analyses confirmed the results observed in the cross-sectional analysis. Continuous lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone delays disease progression versus melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide and has been associated with a clinically meaningful improvement in health-related quality-of-life. These results further establish continuous lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone as a new standard of care for initial therapy of myeloma by demonstrating superior health-related quality-of-life during treatment, compared with melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide.