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Myeloma, Party Of Two: Unicorns
By: Tabitha Tow Burns; Published: October 26, 2018 @ 12:57 pm | Comments Disabled
I have a red-headed friend with lymphoma. She seems to be an outlier on the spectrum of “average responses” to treatment. Even common frontline drugs have caused her unexpected side effects. When it comes to her treatment, she teases her specialists that she’s a “medical unicorn,” something never before seen. I’m beginning to think she’s not the only one.
I am writing this column on Day +11, or the eleventh day after my husband Daniel’s autologous stem cell transplant. The road we took to get here did not go according to plan. He’s been hospitalized numerous times, experienced failed treatments, and we’ve had to make some tough decisions about clinical trials. We don’t yet know if the journey has been a success, but we’ve doubled down for a positive outcome and given it all we’ve got.
Daniel started treatment for his multiple myeloma in April. After discussing treatment options with his specialist, we determined that Daniel would receive three to four cycles of induction therapy followed by stem cell collection, an autologous stem cell transplant, and then maintenance therapy for an indefinite amount of time thereafter.
Daniel’s risk markers had previously indicated that his myeloma was “average risk,” with a t(11:14) chromosomal abnormality and 20 percent myeloma involvement on his last bone marrow aspirate. Given his risk level, Daniel’s transplant specialist believed he was a good candidate for achieving a complete remission, and suggested that his stem cell transplant plan would likely involve only melphalan, the standard approach used in transplants for multiple myeloma.
Daniel only had one bone lesion on his clavicle, and otherwise he is healthy and young, so we were told that we might even be able to do his entire stem cell transplant process outpatient. This meant that he could recover at home after the melphalan administration, and we would return to the hospital several times a week for labs and fast-track clinic checks until such time that his specialist released him to return to work.
It’s amazing how quickly things can change when you have multiple myeloma.
Daniel’s induction therapy consisted of Kyprolis (carfilzomib), Revlimid (lenalidomide), and dexamethasone. The first cycle was promising. It dropped his M-spike from 3.1 g/dL to 1.8 g/dL (31 g/l to 18 g/l). This drop in M-spike was enough to qualify as a partial response, and he therefore met our treatment center's qualifications for a stem cell transplant. We met with his transplant specialist and began planning for Daniel's transplant.
By the end of cycle 2, the optimism began to become more measured as the first setback occurred. During cycle 2, Daniel was hospitalized for painful kidney stones. Without any history of kidney issues or kidney stones in particular, we had to assume that he was experiencing a previously unreported / unseen reaction to one of the drugs in his treatment plan. It was a painful reminder that myeloma treatment is not an exact science. By the end of cycle 2, his M-spike had only decreased to 1.3 g/dL. The team hoped that he would achieve a deeper response by the end of cycle 3.
We then experienced another setback. The Revlimid had given Daniel bilateral pulmonary emboli, or blood clots in both his lungs. Another hospital stay came and went, during which his doctors were able to stabilize his condition with ongoing Lovenox (enoxaparin) injections.
After a week’s delay, we proceeded with cycle 4 of Kyprolis and dexamethasone alone, without the Revlimid. Sadly, we would soon learn that it was the Revlimid that seemed to be the primary agent working against Daniel’s myeloma. Once the Revlimid was removed, Daniel’s M-spike rose back up to 1.7 g/dL, and he became severely neutropenic. Daniel’s M-spike would eventually rise to above 2.0 g/dL after cycle 4, and his free light chains were sporadic as well.
During this time, Daniel was restaged with another bone marrow aspiration, and we learned that his bone marrow plasma cell percentage had increased from 20 percent to an estimated 30 to 40 percent. Imaging tests also indicated myeloma-related activity in his spine. With this level of marrow involvement and the increase in the M-spike above Daniel's initial partial response, the mood of his medical team changed significantly.
Not only did his induction therapy not bring about the complete response we had hoped to reach prior to the stem cell transplant, but it would seem that Daniel had relapsed before the transplant had even begun. This was not the response anyone expected from his “average risk” myeloma.
Due to his biochemical progression, we had an extensive discussion about strategy. Since Daniel no longer was in remission of any kind, he no longer qualified for a stem cell transplant. So we decided to proceed with what his doctors called “salvage therapy.”
We were presented with two options.
Option one would be to proceed with an immunotherapy-based regimen containing Darzalex (daratumumab) and then see if Daniel could qualify for a transplant thereafter.
Option two would be to undergo a chemo-mobilization regimen designed to both treat his myeloma and increase his white blood cell counts. Assuming that he didn’t develop any complications, Daniel would then go immediately for stem cell collection, followed by the transplant.
After extensive conversation about these options, we decided not to burn through a line of immunotherapy and instead utilize the harsher chemo-mobilization option in hopes that it would have enough of an impact on his multiple myeloma to allow for both stem cell collection and the transplant.
The chemotherapy / mobilization regimen Daniel received is called "CBAD," an acronym that reflects the cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan), bortezomib (Velcade), Adriamycin (doxorubicin), and dexamethasone included in the regimen. Due to the toxicity of the four-drug combination, Daniel had to be hospitalized for its administration and treatment of the side effects.
The side effects were everything you would expect from high-dose chemotherapy. Daniel began to lose his hair, and he had nausea and diarrhea. We felt the side effects would be worth it, though, if the regimen would get us to complete remission prior to the stem cell collection.
Unfortunately, Daniel’s myeloma once again did not respond according to plan.
After CBAD, Daniel’s M-spike increased from 1.7 g/dL to 2.2 g/dL. It was a shocking outcome, and we worked with Daniel’s transplant specialist to determine the best way to do Daniel's stem cell transplant given how he had responded to the CBAD regimen.
Then, another delay. Daniel was hospitalized for an unexplained fainting episode that happened when he was giving blood at the stem cell clinic lab, and then later on for headaches and an infection related to a recurring sinus infection.
After his fifth hospitalization in as few as five months, Daniel went for stem cell collection. Over two days of Neupogen (filgrastim) infusions and stem cell harvesting, Daniel was unable to produce enough stem cells, so nightly two-hour Mozobil (plerixafor) infusions were added to the daily four-hour Neupogen infusions.
This was a trying time because the infusions had to be administered exactly 12 hours apart from one another. That meant long days and nights at the cancer center with brief trips home to sleep, only to start the process all over again the next day. This went on for three more days, until the stem cell collection process was complete.
In the end, enough cells were collected for Daniel to have two autologous stem cell transplants. But what kind of autologous stem cell transplant would be best for him? In no way had he responded to his treatments thus far the way an “average risk” myeloma patient should.
For reasons we could not explain, Daniel was not average risk after all. He was a myeloma unicorn.
Over the next week, we spoke with different members of Daniel’s stem cell transplant team. We knew that they no longer considered him a good candidate for the standard high-dose chemotherapy regimen used during autologous stem cell transplants. What we didn’t know was just how difficult the alternative would be.
Daniel always says that the news is never as good or as bad as you think it’s going to be when you have multiple myeloma. When I think back on our lives over the past six months, those words ring very true for me. I would add that the news is almost always unexpected as well.
In my next column, I’ll report on Daniel's transplant and the aggressive strategy his doctors recommended for it.
Tabitha Tow Burns writes a monthly column for The Myeloma Beacon. Her husband Daniel was diagnosed with smoldering myeloma in 2012 and active (symptomatic) multiple myeloma in 2018. You can view a list of Tabitha's previously published columns here [1].
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