Title: Management of renal failure in Myeloma patients.
1Management of renal failure in Myeloma
patients.
MERIT update
- Dr Judith Behrens
- St Helier Hospital
- Carshalton
2OVERVIEW
- Background.
- The challenge of renal impairment in myeloma
patients. - MERIT.
- Design
- History
- Results so far
- Implications
3What is the extent of the problem?
- Renal impairment occurs in
- 25- 30 of patients at presentation
- (Knudsen 1994, Kyle RA, 1975, Eleutherakis-Papaia
kovou V et al, 2007). - 50 of patients at some stage of the illness
- (Alexanian, Barlogie and Dixon, 1990).
- 3-12 patients require dialysis or other major
intervention - (Clark, Shetty and Soutar, 1999).
4Why do patients with myeloma get renal damage?
- Light chain toxicity
- Hypercalcaemia
- Dehydration
- Nephrotic drugs particularly NSAIDS
- Infection
- Hyperuricaemia
- Plasma cell infiltration
Immunoperoxidase staining showing proximal
tubules stuffed with light chains
5Importance of SFLC in IIMM
- FLCs are abnormal in 95 at disease presentation.
- concentrations are gt1,000mg/L in 10- 15 of IgG
and IgA cases with IIMM - characteristic of IgD multiple myeloma
6Urinary flc excretion and renal failure by
paraprotein class
- IgG, 1367 patients IgA, 649 patients LCO, 310
patients. - Urinary flc excretion, Patients with renal
failure no () - g/g creatinine IgG IgA LCO
- 0 g/g 28 (2) 29 (3) 0 (0)
- Less than 4 g/g 48 (8) 46 (11) 22 (18)
- 4-12 g/g 13 (29) 12 (28) 18 (38)
- More than 12 g/g 11 (48) 13 (48) 60 (54)
- Blood 2006 108 2013 19
- Effects of paraprotein heavy and light chain
types and free light chain load on survival in
myeloma - Mark Drayson, Gulnaz Begum, Supratik Basu,
Sudhaker Makkuni, Janet Dunn, Nicola Barth, and
J. Anthony Child
7Importance of SFLC in LCMM
- LCMM can be missed by conventional techniques.
- SPE demonstrates a monoclonal band in 50 cases,
- IFE demonstrates monoclonal bands in most cases
but may be misinterpreted - Urine needed for identification and quantitation
but urine tests may never arrive in the lab. - Serum Freelite assay pos 100 cases.
- Quantititative
8What is the effect of renal failure on outcome?
- 1973 MRC IV th trial median survival
- ureagt 13mmol/l 2 months
- urea lt 6.5 37 months
- 1995 median survival with renal impairment
- (Torra, Blade et al BJH 1995)
- 20 -24 months
9Impact of renal impairment on survival in myeloma
patients
- 30 patients die in the first 60 -100 days
(c.f. 10 overall) - However those surviving the first 60 days have
similar overall survival to patients without
renal failure. - Normally IgG and IgA myeloma patients have longer
survival than LCOM but in patients having the
same quantity of BJP survival is the same for
all isotypes - The degree of renal impairment predicts survival
-
- Drayson et al. Analysis of MRC patients in 1Vth
Vth V1th and V111th UK MRC trials - Blood June 2006
-
- Thus rescuing the kidney is key
10What is the likelihood of renal recovery?
- Until last decade widely quoted to be 10 once
dialysis dependent - Blade 2005
11Renal out come of Patients admitted to SW Thames
Renal Unit 2000 -2007
12Renal out come of Patients admitted to SW Thames
Renal Unit 2000 -2007
- Of 47 New patients
- 14 (30) early death (including 4 considered too
unfit for active treatment) - 13 (28) on long term dialysis
- 20 (42) avoided or became dialysis independent
- 38 reversal of dialysis dependency
- Of 15 Relapsed patients
- 27 early death
- 6.6 long term dialysis
- 66.6 dialysis avoided or reversed
- 88 reversal of dialysis dependency
13Overall survival for myeloma patients has
improved in the last decade since the use of high
dose steroid containing regimes and novel
therapies
Projected median survival in patients entered in
to Myeloma 1X is 6-7 years Morgan et al IMW 2009
The goal must be to ensure that patients with
renal impairment and myeloma have access to this
longer survival
Overall survival gt 2000 ? 12 mths
Newly diagnosed MM (1971-2006) n 2981
Kumar ASH 2007 abstract 3594 Kumar et al. Blood
2008 Mar 1111(5)2516-20
14Treatment of patients with myeloma renal failure
by reducing the SFLC
- Physical removal
- Switching off production
15Physical removal
- Plasma exchange is theoretically beneficial in
cast nephropathy, - Evidence from two early small randomised trials
conflicting - (Zucchelli et al, 1988 Johnson et al, 1990)
-
- No conclusive evidence that plasma exchange
substantially reduced a composite outcome of
death, dialysis dependence, or glomerular
filtration rate lt30 ml /min per 1.73 m2 at 6
months in randomized, controlled trial conducted
in Canada between 1998 and 2004 - (Clark et al 2005)
16Reversibility of renal failure with high dose
steroid containing regimes
- 73 of 41 newly diagnosed patients
- Increasing to 80 with the addition of novel
agents - Kastritis et al Haematologica 2007
17MERIT TRIAL DESIGN
18MERIT
MyEloma Renal Impairment Trial
A randomised controlled trial of adjunctive
plasma exchange in patients with newly diagnosed
multiple myeloma and acute renal failure
- Inclusion Criteria
- Newly diagnosed myeloma
- Acute renal failure (creatinine gt 500mmol/l,
urine output lt400 ml/d or requiring dialysis) - Aged 18 years or older
- Written Informed Consent
- No previous chemotherapy for myeloma
- No significant intrinsic renal disease unrelated
to myeloma
- Exclusion Criteria
- Pregnancy
- Inadequate contraception
- Known HIV seropositivity
- Platelet count lt50x109/l (risk of exacerbating
thrombocytopenia by plasma exchange - Standard contra-indications to study medication
including allergy, abnormal liver function tests,
known cardiac insufficiency and peptic ulcer
- Trial Endpoints
- Primary
- Proportion of patients alive and dialysis
independent at 100 days - Secondary
- Overall survival
- Proportion of patients alive and dialysis
independent at 6 and 12 months - GFR at 15 days, 100 days, 6 months and 12 months
- Change in serum-free light chain levels between
days 0 and 15 - Response of myeloma to treatment according to
standard criteria at 100 days, 6 months and 12
months - Quality of life
19Recruitment
- 79 patients randomised January 2004 to January
2009
20Recruitment per centre
21MERIT interim analysis of effect of SFLC on renal
recovery
- Malignant SFLC levels were significantly lower at
entry in patients who were alive and dialysis
free at 100 days - Greater percentage reductions in FLC in the first
two weeks are associated with a higher
probability of renal recovery - Maximum percentage reduction in malignant FLC
levels in the first two weeks was variable and
mostly achieved by 5 days. - median 68.9 (range -78 to 99)
- ADF group mean 74.1 sd 16.4
- NADF mean 44.6 sd 44.6.
- Drayson et al Poster IMW 2009
22It follows from MERIT data
- that patients need to be identified earlier in
the disease so FLC load is smaller - and
- that treatment has to be directed at the most
effective means of reducing the SFLC
23Current Status of Trial.
- Data cleansing.
- Your prompt return of information greatly
appreciated. - Meeting of TMG imminent
- Publication in 2010
24Acknowledgements
- Patients and staff
- Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
- Addenbrookes Hospital
- Aintree Hospital NHS Trust
- Belfast Hospital
- Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
- Glasgow Royal Infirmary/ Glasgow Western
- Hope Hospital, Salford
- Hull Royal Infirmary
- Kent and Canterbury Hospital
- William Harvey Hospital
- Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital
- Leeds General Infirmary
- Leicester General Hospital
- Monklands Hospital, Airdrie
- Oxford Radcliffe Hospital
- Royal Cornwall Hospital
- Royal Sussex Hospital, Brighton
- Southmead Hospital, Bristol
- Trial Co-ordination and Statistics
- Sue Bell
- Gill Booth
- Sue Bourne
- Kim Cocks
- Dena Cohen
- Corrine Collett
- Central Laboratories
- MT Drayson
- A Adkins
- J Birtwistle
- N Newnham
- K Walker
Trial Management Group Dr G Gaskin Dr J Behrens,
Dr GH Jackson Dr MT Drayson Dr N Iggo NCRI
Haematological Oncology Clinical Studies
Group UK Myeloma Forum Clinical Trials
Committee Myeloma UK Funders