Best Practices

Treating Patients With Multiple Myeloma in the VA


 

References

Thrombosis

Dr. Mehta . It’s also prothrombotic.

Dr. Chauncey. If you actually ask the patient, independent of the hyperglycemia, independent of the myopathy, independent of psychosis, but just quality of life, they’ll typically tell you that the on-and-off of steroids is the worst part of the regimen. It’s often the roller coaster ride of short-term hypomania followed by dysphoria.

Dr. Mehta . And the lack of sleep. They describe it as being out of their skin.

Dr. Chauncey. They are. And as soon as they stop, often there is a depression.

Dr. Mehta . It is very, very difficult. And some actually develop psychosis.

Dr. Ascensão . We all use some form of acyclovir or its derivative for the prevention of shingles in patients exposed to the proteasome inhibitors. We use aspirin, usually low dose (81 mg), for deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis. But is anybody using other anticoagulants or putting everybody prophylactically on proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) or just seeing how people do first and then adjusting?

Dr. Chauncey. I typically use conventional dose aspirin, and if there’s breakthrough thrombosis, the first response should be that it is not the best regimen for this patient. Sometimes you have to go back to it, and if someone’s an anticoagulation candidate, then full anticoagulation is
needed if that’s the best regimen. Usually if there’s a breakthrough thrombosis, it is a deal breaker, and you’re ready to move on to a nonthrombogenic regimen.

There has been an observation (there is some biological basis to back this up) that if you give bortezomib with an IMiD, the regimen became less thrombogenic than with the IMiD and dexamethasone alone.

Dr. Ascensão. On aspirin, even if they’re on an IMiD plus a proteasome inhibitor, I just don’t know that the data are good enough for us to avoid it at this point in time. And I don’t necessarily put people on a PPI unless they’ve got added gastrointestinal problems and unless they have associated heartburn or dyspepsia symptoms.

Dr. Mehta . I use low-dose aspirin in every patient. And if they breakthrough, they go on full anticoagulation usually with a new oral anticoagulant. I use PPIs only if needed, although most of them do need it, and, of course, bisphosphonates so the bone protective aspect.

Click to read the digital edition.

Pages

Recommended Reading

SU2C announces researcher-industry collaboration on immunotherapy
Federal Practitioner
Can Serum Free Light Chains Be Used for the Early Diagnosis of Monoclonal Immunoglobulin-Secreting B-Cell and Plasma-Cell Diseases? (FULL)
Federal Practitioner
Daratumumab Effective in Combo Regimen
Federal Practitioner
Study Points to Risk Factors for Lymphoma
Federal Practitioner
Multiple Myeloma and Stroke: What’s the Risk?
Federal Practitioner
The Long Legacy of Agent Orange
Federal Practitioner
Guidelines tackle long-term screening, management of myeloma
Federal Practitioner
Phase III trial: VZV protects auto-HCT patients
Federal Practitioner
‘Strong evidence’ links obesity to cancers
Federal Practitioner
Consensus Statement Supporting the Recommendation for Single-Fraction Palliative Radiotherapy for Uncomplicated, Painful Bone Metastases
Federal Practitioner