• Curr Med Res Opin · Jan 2016

    Real-world treatment patterns, comorbidities, and disease-related complications in patients with multiple myeloma in the United States.

    • Xue Song, Ze Cong, and Kathleen Wilson.
    • a a Truven Health Analytics , Ann Arbor , MI , USA.
    • Curr Med Res Opin. 2016 Jan 1; 32 (1): 95-103.

    ObjectivesTo describe multiple myeloma (MM) treatment patterns and comorbidities over time in the US.Research Design And MethodsStudy patients were newly diagnosed with MM (ICD-9-CM 203.0x) between 1 July 2006 and 31 March 2014 and had ≥6 months of data prior to the initial MM diagnosis in MarketScan Research Databases. Patients were followed until inpatient death or the end of data. First-line, second-line, and third-line treatment regimens were identified following diagnosis and were described over time based upon the start date of the first line of therapy (2006-2007, 2008-2014, 2013-2014). Comorbid conditions and disease-related complications were examined during the 6 months prior to the line of therapy start dates.ResultsA total of 24,507 MM patients were examined (mean age: 65.2 years, 54.1% male, mean follow-up: 23 months, 16.2% transplant). Across all lines of therapy, the proportion of patients on thalidomide-based regimens decreased over time. In the first line, bortezomib-based regimens became more common from 2006-2007 to 2008-2014 (2006-2007: 17.0%, 2008-2014: 44.3%, 2013-2014: 49.4%). In the second line, lenalidomide- and bortezomib-based regimens were the most common (2013-2014: lenalidomide: 28.9%, bortezomib: 26.2%). The combination regimen of lenalidomide + bortezomib became more common in the first and second lines. In the third line, carfilzomib- and/or pomalidomide-based regimens were 37.0% in 2013-2014. Skeletal-related events, hypertension, anemia, and chronic kidney disease were the most prevalent comorbidities and disease-related complications. During the 6 months prior to each line of therapy, the prevalence of the majority of the comorbidities and complications increased as patients progressed to higher lines of therapy.ConclusionsMM treatment patterns have been dynamic over time. Comorbid conditions and myeloma-related complications increase as patients progress and may worsen MM patients' prognoses over time. Combination regimens such as lenalidomide + bortezomib are more widely used as first- and second-line therapy. Newly approved agents (carfilzomib, pomalidomide) are the prevailing treatments in the third line and are under further investigation for earlier lines of therapy.

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