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Blood, 15 September 2006, Vol. 108, No. 6, pp. 2013-2019. Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on May 25, 2006; DOI 10.1182/blood-2006-03-008953.
NEOPLASIA Effects of paraprotein heavy and light chain types and free light chain load on survival in myeloma: an analysis of patients receiving conventional-dose chemotherapy in Medical Research Council UK multiple myeloma trialsFrom the Division of Immunity and Infection, the Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit, and the Department of Haematology, Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust and Division of Cancer Studies, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and the Clinical Trials Research Unit, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.
While investigating 2592 patients enrolled in multicenter myeloma trials, we found light chainonly (LCO) patients had worse median survival times (1.9 years) than patients with IgA and IgG paraproteins (2.3 and 2.5 years, respectively) (P < .001). However, IgA and IgG patients with levels of LC excretion similar to those of LCO patients also had poor survival times because of renal failure, resulting in worse survival during induction therapy and at relapse with no difference in progression-free survival between LCO and IgG patients. LC excretion was higher for than for types, but there was no difference in survival between the 2 LC types when stratified for level of LC excretion, indicating that care of renal function is vital to improving the survival of any patient with LC excretion. LCO patients were younger (P = .001), had worse performance status (P = .001), and had more lytic lesions (P < .001), perhaps reflecting late and missed diagnoses in younger and older LCO patients, respectively. No differences were observed between IgA and IgG patients in presentation characteristics, response, or survival from disease progression. The worse survival of IgA patients was attributed to shorter progression-free survival (median, 1.2 vs 1.6 years; P < .001), which is important for maintenance therapy.
Multiple myeloma (MM) results from the proliferation of a neoplastic clone of plasma cells in bone marrow and accounts for 10% of hematologic malignancies.1 The disease is heterogeneous in severity and manifestations, which variably include skeletal disease (70%), renal impairment (20%), anemia (40%), and impaired humoral immunity (80%).1-4 This study assesses whether that heterogeneity of disease is linked to the type of monoclonal immunoglobulin proteins (paraproteins) the malignant plasma cells secrete.
Immunoglobulin consists of 2 identical heavy chain regions, variable and constant, which are encoded on chromosome 14, and 2 identical light chains also consisting of variable and constant regions. The light chains are either
Virgin B cells use µ and This international study also noted a median overall survival time of 35 months for 1035 light chainonly (LCO) patients but did not explore the significance of light chain (LC) excretion in patients with IgG or IgA paraproteins.12 Normal plasma cells produce more free light chain (flc) than heavy chain. The flc is secreted into the blood, filtered at the renal glomeruli, and reabsorbed by the renal tubule cells. In two thirds or more of MM patients, the excess of flc production exceeds renal tubular reabsorption capacity, and flc is easily detected in the urine.1,3 In many patients, flc is nephrotoxic, and the consequent renal impairment is associated with worse survival.1,13-17 In some patients the dysregulation in heavy, and light chain production is so extreme that only free light chains are secreted in detectable quantities, commonly called Bence-Jones or light chainonly (LCO) myeloma. It is uncertain whether, in addition to the nephrotoxicity of flc, the extreme dysregulation in heavy and light chain production is associated with different or worse disease for LCO myeloma patients. Patients receiving conventional dose chemotherapy in the multicenter Medical Research Council (MRC) United Kingdom myelomatosis trials from 1980 to 2002 were the subjects of this study, in which paraprotein type and levels were monitored by central laboratory analysis. We assessed for differences in clinical presentation and in overall and progression-free survival among the 3 main groups of patients (IgG, IgA, and LCO myeloma) and by light chain type. We have compared survival between patients with IgG or IgA myeloma and patients with LCO myeloma stratified by level of urinary light chain excretion.
Patients with IgG, IgA, and LCO myeloma enrolled in the IV, V, VI, and VIII MRC UK myelomatosis trials between 1980 and 2002 (2592 total patients) were eligible for this study. Approval was obtained by local ethics committees of the participating hospitals' institutional review boards. Informed consent was provided according to the Declaration of Helsinki.
Our diagnostic criteria were consistent with the recently agreed criteria for symptomatic myeloma as defined and published by the International Myeloma Working Group.18 The characteristics of these trials are listed in Table 1. Patients were assigned to standard dose melphalan-based chemotherapy (822 patients) or melphalan-based conventional dose combination chemotherapy (1712 patients) as exemplified by doxorubicin, carmustine, cyclophosphamide, and melphalan (ABCM).19-21 Fifty-eight patients with thrombocytopenia received cyclophosphamide therapy. Twenty-six patients in the VI trial received melphalan 140 mg without stem cell rescue. Analysis did not include the Myeloma VII Trial because half these patients received high-dose chemotherapy with autologous hematopoietic stem cell rescue.22 Little difference was observed in survival, and no significant difference was observed in the distribution of paraprotein types between the trials or between the treatment arms within individual trials. Serum creatinine,
Statistical analysis
Differences in patient characteristics and causes of death by paraprotein class group were investigated using Pearson
Patient characteristics
IgA and IgG patients were alike in all presentation characteristics with the exception of corrected calcium, with hypercalcemia in 45% of IgA patients compared with 28% of IgG patients (Table 2). However, there was no difference in the rates of bone fractures, bone pain, or lytic lesions between these 2 groups of patients, and the increased hypercalcemia levels in IgA patients might have been artifactual. Presentation characteristics of patients with LCO myeloma were unlike those of IgA or IgG patients. Sixty percent of LCO patients were younger than 65 years of age, whereas the rate was 48% in IgA and IgG patients (P = .001). Sixty-six percent of IgA and IgG patients had serum albumin concentrations lower than 35 g/L compared with 28% of LCO patients (P < .001), but this might partly have reflected a compensation for high total serum protein levels attributable to paraprotein. Despite their younger age, LCO patients had poorer performance status; 61% had restricted activity or worse compared with 51% of IgA patients and 50% of IgG patients (P = .001). LCO patients had a higher incidence of renal impairment with elevated serum creatinine (42% had serum creatinine greater than 199 mM compared with 16% of IgA and 13% of IgG patients; P = .001). LCO patients also had a higher incidence of elevated S
Overall survival by paraprotein class IgG patients had the longest overall survival (median, 2.5 years; 95% CI, 2.3-2.7 years) followed by IgA patients (median, 2.3 years; 95% CI, 2.1-2.6 years; P = .01). LCO patients had the shortest overall survival (median, 1.9 years; 95% CI, 1.5-2.3 years; P < .001; Figure 1). Early death and failure to reach plateau LCO myeloma was associated with early death, with 19% of LCO patients dying within 100 days compared with 11% of patients with IgA and 12% with IgG myeloma; this increase in early deaths was primarily attributable to renal failure (P = .01; Table 3). LCO patients were less likely to achieve plateau than IgA or IgG patients (48% compared with 56%; P = .008).
Duration of first plateau phase by paraprotein class Little difference in duration of plateau was observed between LCO and IgG patients (P = .08). Median durations of plateau were 1.6 years (95% CI, 1.5-1.8 years) for IgG patients and 1.5 years (95% CI, 1.3-1.8 years) for LCO myeloma patients. However, IgA patients had significantly shorter durations of plateau than IgG and LCO patients (median, 1.2; 95% CI, 1.1-1.3; P < .001; Figure 2.) Survival from first disease progression Survival from disease progression was worse for LCO patients. Median survival from disease progression for IgA and IgG patients was 1.3 years (95% CI, 1.2-1.5 years) compared with 0.9 years for LCO myeloma patients (95% CI, 0.7-1.1 years; P < .001; Figure 3). Effect of free light chain (flc) excretion on survival
Twenty-eight percent of IgA and IgG myeloma patients did not have significant urinary flc excretion, and within this group only 2% had renal impairment (Table 4). Eleven percent of IgG and 13% of IgA patients had high levels of urine flc excretion (greater than 12 g/g creatinine), and 48% of these patients had renal impairment; this compares to a 54% rate of renal impairment in LCO patients with greater than 12 g/g creatinine flc excretion. There was no difference between IgG, IgA, and LCO myeloma in the probability of renal impairment for a given level of flc excretion (Table 4). No differences in overall survival between paraprotein classes stratified by level of urinary light chain excretion were detected (Figure 4). No differences in survival were identified between the
The paraprotein class and degree of dysregulation between heavy and light chain production reflect differences in original immune response and biology of the malignant cells. Whether the 3 main paraprotein types of multiple myelomaIgG, IgA, and light chain only (LCO)are associated with significantly different disease at presentation and subsequent survival is relevant to prognosis and clinical management. An international study of staging in myeloma noted median survival for IgG, IgA, and LCO patients to be 49 months, 40 months, and 35 months, respectively.12 However, this study did not explore why IgA patients fared worse than IgG patients, nor did it explore the significance of LC excretion in IgG and IgA patients or whether the extreme dysregulation in heavy and light chain production was associated with different or worse disease for patients with LCO myeloma. This study assesses presentation characteristics and survival in 2592 patients receiving conventional dose chemotherapy in the IV, V, VI, and VIII MRC myeloma trials over 22 years. Most (822) patients received standard dose melphalan-based chemotherapy or melphalan-based-conventional dose combination chemotherapy (ABCM; 1712 patients). Paraprotein types and levels were assessed by central laboratory analysis (Table 1).
We found no differences in the presentation characteristics of IgG and IgA myeloma patients, with the exception of a higher incidence of hypercalcemia in IgA patients (45% vs 28%; P = .001; Table 2). This higher incidence of hypercalcemia was not associated with any increased incidence of bone pain, lytic lesions, or fractures, and we are investigating whether it might reflect an interference of IgA paraproteins with the measurement of corrected serum calcium levels. We found no difference between IgG and IgA patients with respect to early deaths (12% and 11%), percentages of patients achieving plateau phase (56% for both groups), or survival from disease progression (Figure 3). The difference in overall survival was wholly attributable to a shorter duration of plateau phase for IgA compared with IgG patients (1.2 vs 1.6 years; P < .001; Figure 2). This clinically important difference should be taken into account when considering maintenance therapy and in the interpretation of results of trials of maintenance therapy. The biologic cause for this difference in the duration of the plateau phase might reflect susceptibility to the translocation of genes into IgG versus IgA switch regions. IgA patients have been shown to have a higher incidence of t(4;14) and associated early disease progression,25 but we did not have cytogenetic data in our study.
Evidence that light chain disease is a variant of myeloma dates from the 1941 report of Gutman et al,26 who described a patient with myeloma, hypoproteinemia, and Bence-Jones proteinuria. Light chain myeloma accounts for 10% to 20% of all cases of myeloma, and it is well established that LCO myeloma is associated with a higher incidence of renal impairment and worse survival.1-4,13-17 Whether this worse survival is attributable solely to light chain nephrotoxicity or also reflects a biologically more aggressive disease is unclear, and the importance of LC excretion to survival of IgG and IgA patients also requires clarification.
LCO myeloma patients were younger than IgG and IgA patients. Only 40% of LCO myeloma patients were older than 65 years compared with 52% of IgG and IgA patients (P = .002; Table 2). This might have reflected biologic differences, failure to diagnose LCO myeloma in older patients, or failure to enter them into trials. Despite their younger age, LCO patients had worse performance status (P = .001) and greater incidence of multiple lytic lesions at diagnosis that might have reflected the biology of the disease or a delay in diagnosis because of the lack of a serum paraprotein, emphasizing the need to assess urine for flc and indicating that failure to send urine to the laboratory can delay the diagnosis of myeloma; assay of serum for flc may mitigate this problem. Paraproteins cause high total serum protein levels and a compensatory reduction in albumin concentration, so it was not surprising that twice as many LCO patients (72%) as IgG and IgA patients (34%) had normal serum albumin levels, a factor that might have confounded the use of albumin as a prognostic marker. LCO patients had a 3-fold higher incidence of renal impairment and elevated levels of S
Death within 100 days occurred in 19% of LCO patients compared with 12% of IgG and IgA patients (Table 3), primarily because of renal failure attributable to higher incidence and amounts of urinary flc in LCO patients (Table 4). Seventy-eight percent of LCO patients had greater than 4 g/g creatinine flc excretion compared with only 24% of IgG and IgA myeloma patients. IgG and IgA patients with the same levels of urinary flc excretion as LCO myeloma patients had the same incidence of renal failure and poor survival (Table 4; Figure 4). There has been conjecture as to whether light chain type affects survival. In LCO patients, there was no difference in survival between
Progression-free survival reflects the intrinsic biology of the disease and is also an indicator of any treatment benefit. We noted no difference in progression-free survival between IgG and LCO myeloma patients. However, survival from progression was worse for LCO myeloma patients. Response to treatment and relapse in LCO myeloma was conventionally assessed by urine light chain measurements. Studies suggest that kidneys metabolize 20 to 30 g/d flc.27,28 Free light chains are not present in urine until their production exceeds the renal threshold; thus, serum levels are greatly increased before flc is detectable in the urine. Recent studies suggest urine flc measurements are relatively insensitive for assessing residual disease or early relapse in LCO myeloma.29 The increase in mortality at relapse may, therefore, reflect a delay in diagnosing relapse and the higher incidence of associated renal impairment. In these patients, careful monitoring of disease in the plateau phase and preemptive therapy early in relapse may reduce further renal damage and thus improve survival. Newly available serum flc analysis may prove to be a more sensitive way of monitoring disease response and relapse in LCO myeloma.29,30
This large study demonstrates a strong association between level of flc excretion, renal impairment, and poor survival irrespective of paraprotein type or light chain class (
Submitted March 9, 2006; accepted May 9, 2006.
Prepublished online as Blood First Edition Paper, May 25, 2006; DOI 10.1182/blood-2006-03-008953.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
Reprints: Mark T. Drayson, Division of Immunity and Infection, Medical School, University of Birmingham, Vincent Drive, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom; e-mail: m.t.drayson{at}bham.ac.uk.
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