TO THE EDITOR:
POEMS (Polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal protein, skin changes) syndrome (aka, osteosclerotic myeloma) is a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with an underlying plasma cell neoplasm.1,2 Effective treatment of POEMS syndrome involves control of the underlying plasma cell clone, which often leads to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) response and improvement in clinical symptoms.3 Multiple studies of autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (autoHCT) in POEMS syndrome exist; however, most are single-center experiences without data on long-term toxicity, including the risk of second primary malignancies (SPM).4-10 We report the outcomes of an international cohort of patients with POEMS syndrome undergoing autoHCT, emphasizing toxicities in comparison with multiple myeloma (MM) along with long-term safety and outcomes.
The Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR) database is a research collaboration between the Medical College of Wisconsin and The National Marrow Donor Program, comprised of more than 300 centers worldwide. Participating centers report all consecutive transplants consecutively and patients are followed longitudinally. CIBMTR studies comply with federal regulations on protecting human research participants; protected health information is collected and maintained in CIBMTR's capacity as a public health authority under the HIPAA Privacy Rule. All POEMS syndrome patients reported to the CIBMTR aged ≥18 years who underwent autoHCT between 2008-2018 with melphalan conditioning were identified.
Nonrelapse mortality (NRM) was defined as death from any cause within the first 100 days or after that in the absence of relapse or progression. Progression-free survival (PFS) was defined as the time from transplantation to relapse, progression, or death from any cause. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time from transplantation to death from any cause. Standard definitions for neutrophil and platelet engraftment definitions were used.11
Covariates were summarized using descriptive statistics. Probabilities of PFS and OS were calculated using Kaplan-Meier product-limit estimate using the log-rank test. The cumulative incidence of NRM and disease relapse/progression were estimated, accounting for competing risks. We compared outcomes of patients with POEMS syndrome to patients with MM having comprehensive report form (CRF) level data for 2008-2018 (n = 2501) from a published study.12 Multivariate analysis was conducted using the Cox proportional hazard regression model to understand the association between patient-, disease-, and transplant-related factors with PFS and OS. The variables considered in the stepwise model included age at transplant, sex, race, Karnofsky performance status at transplant (KPS) (≥90% vs <90%), HCT comorbidity index (HCT-CI 0 vs 1 vs 2 vs 3 vs 4 vs ≥5), serum creatinine before transplant (≥2 vs <2 vs missing), organ involvement (pulmonary vs cerebrovascular vs hepatic vs other), VEGF level, disease status at transplant (untreated vs complete response/very good partial response (VGPR)/partial response (PR) vs less than PR vs relapsed/progressed), and time from diagnosis to autoHCT (<6 months vs 6-12 months vs 12-24 months vs >24 months). A P value <.05 was considered significant. The statistical package SAS version 9.4 was used.
Between 2008-2018, 331 patients with POEMS syndrome from 92 centers were identified (Table 1). The median age at transplant was 51 years (range, 18-77), with 66% males and 64 (19%) Black. Most patients (70%) had KPS <90%, and 165 (50%) had an HCT-CI of ≥3. Pulmonary comorbidities were present in 172 (52%) patients, followed by the cerebrovascular system in 18 (5%) and hepatic in 10 (3%). Pre-HCT hematological disease response included 45 (14%) in VGPR or better, 79 (24%) in PR, 87 (26%) with stable disease, and 19 (6%) patients with progressive disease. Median time to autoHCT was 7 months. Mobilization strategies included G-CSF alone in 72 (22%) patients, in combination with plerixafor for 94 (28%) patients, and with chemotherapy in 29 (9%) patients. Eighty-seven percent received 200 mg/m2 of melphalan as conditioning chemotherapy. The median follow-up of survivors was 48 months (range, 3-137 months). In the CRF cohort (n = 47), we identified engraftment rate of 15%, with most of them needing corticosteroid treatment. The majority of patients (n = 39) had hospitalization of <21 days. The median time from autoHCT to neutrophil engraftment was 13 days and platelet engraftment of 18 days, respectively.
Univariate analysis of outcomes showed that day 100 NRM was 0.9% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.2% to 2.2%); 1-year NRM was 1.5% (95% CI, 0.5% to 3.1%), and 4-year NRM was 4.9% (95% CI, 2.6-7.9). The 4-year PFS was 79.7% (95% CI, 74.5% to 84.3%), and the 4-year OS was 92.7% (95% CI, 89.2% to 95.6%). On comparison of outcomes with those of MM patients, no difference in NRM at 100 days (P = .623), 1 year (P = .706) or 4 years (P = .128) was seen. Five-year outcomes were superior among patients with POEMS syndrome compared with MM: 5-year PFS (72.2% vs 34.5%; P = .001) and 5-year OS (90.9% vs 71%; P = .001), Figure 1. On multivariable analysis, the only factor significant for worse OS included age of >60 years (hazard ratio, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.2-5.6; P = .0148) at autoHCT. There were no significant predictors for relapse, NRM, and PFS.
Our database analysis is the largest study to date on outcomes of patients with POEMS syndrome undergoing autoHCT. Although therapies including lenalidomide, bortezomib, and daratumumab13,14 have shown good hematologic disease control in POEMS syndrome, autoHCT remains an effective therapy in this disease.15 With 50% of patients having a HCT-CI index of ≥3 and 70% with KPS <90, our study elucidates the safety of autoHCT in patients with POEMS syndrome and multiple underlying comorbidities.16-19
We describe the practice patterns and multicenter autoHCT clinical experience in POEMS syndrome, such as induction therapy and mobilization strategies. Induction therapy available in the 14% of patients (n = 47) with comprehensive research data included bortezomib and lenalidomide with dexamethasone in 45% of those patients. Pre-HCT disease status had no impact on posttransplant outcomes, though this can be hard to assess given that patients often have low M-spikes to follow. These findings contrast with light chain amyloidosis, where induction therapy has shown benefit.20 Although the ideal mobilization strategy is not defined in POEMS syndrome, a small study suggested that cyclophosphamide with G-CSF may reduce the incidence of engraftment syndrome.21 We identified G-CSF plus or minus plerixafor as the predominant strategy in 50%, with only 12% getting chemotherapy mobilization. We identified an engraftment syndrome rate of 15%, in range with published literature describing rates between 6% to 37%.5,8,10
Finally, comparison of outcomes of POEMS syndrome with MM outcomes did not identify a difference in short- or long-term NRM. Patients with POEMS syndrome had superior PFS/OS compared with MM at 5 years, consistent with known data. Our multivariate analysis only identified older age compared with younger age as a correlate to worse OS, but our data lack comparison of outcomes with POEMS syndrome patients not undergoing autoHCT. Understanding the risk of SPM is crucial for a disease with excellent long-term survival. Of 331 patients, 16 (5%) patients developed SPM, including 4 (1.2%) myeloid malignancies and 12 (3.6%) new solid tumors, comparable to MM with hematologic SPM of 2.8% and solid tumor SPM of 4.2% in patients not receiving maintenance lenalidomide after autoHCT.22
Our study was limited in assessing important clinical factors seen with POEMS syndrome. We included all patients, with only 14% cases with CRF data. Supplemental data on VEGF, lung function, and imaging characteristics from 8 high volume centers was collected but was also limited by missing data. Thus, our data are unable to specify clinical or VEGF responses. Due to these issues, we decided to use hematological progression as a marker of PFS given that this was well captured in the CIBMTR database. Another limitation is ascertaining time to next therapy as patients with biochemical progression may not consistently go on to the next line of treatment until clinical symptoms or signs. Like many published studies4,5,23 we were limited to using hematological progression as a marker of PFS given that was well captured in the CIBMTR database with understanding of its clinical implication. To conclude, this is a global cohort, the largest to date, providing safety and long-term outcomes that serve as a benchmark for studies and help provide decision-making tools in peri-autoHCT for patients and physicians of this rare disease.
Acknowledgments: The Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR) is supported primarily by Public Health Service U24CA076518 from National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute (NCI), the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID); HHSH250201700006C from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA); and N00014-20-1-2705 and N00014-20-1-2832 from the Office of Naval Research. Support is also provided by Be the Match Foundation, the Medical College of Wisconsin, the National Marrow Donor Program, and from the following commercial entities: AbbVie; Accenture Actinium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Adaptive Biotechnologies Corporation; Adienne SA; Allovir, Inc.; Amgen, Inc.; Astellas Pharma US; Bluebird Bio, Inc.; Bristol Myers Squibb Co.; CareDx; CSL Behring; CytoSen Therapeutics, Inc.; Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd.; Eurofins Viracor; DBA Eurofins Transplant Diagnostics; Fate Therapeutics; Gamida-Cell, Ltd.; Gilead; GlaxoSmithKline; HistoGenetics; Incyte Corporation; Iovance; Janssen Research & Development, LLC; Janssen/Johnson & Johnson; Jasper Therapeutics; Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Kadmon; Karius; Karyopharm Therapeutics; Kiadis Pharma; Kite Pharma Inc; Kite, a Gilead Company; Kyowa Kirin International plc; Kyowa Kirin; Legend Biotech; Magenta Therapeutics; Medac GmbH; Medexus,; Merck & Co.; Millennium, the Takeda Oncology Co.; Miltenyi Biotec, Inc.; MorphoSys; Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation; Omeros Corporation; OncoImmune, Inc.; Oncopeptides, Inc.; OptumHealth; Orca Biosystems, Inc.; Ossium Health, Inc; Pfizer, Inc.; Pharmacyclics, LLC; Priothera; Sanofi Genzyme; Seagen, Inc.; Stemcyte; Takeda Pharmaceuticals; Talaris Therapeutics; Terumo Blood and Cell Technologies; TG Therapeutics; Tscan; Vertex; Vor Biopharma; and Xenikos BV.
Contribution: A.K., A. Dispenzieri, N.E.-M., S.K., N.S., M.Q., and A. D’Souza contributed to study design, protocol development, analysis, and manuscript preparation; N. E.-M., R.F., and A. D’Souza- contributed to analysis; S.S., T.N., D.K.H., L.D.A., R.B., N.B., B.D., J.K., H.L., C.L., H.M., S.N., and B.S. contributed to protocol and analysis review and edited the manuscript; and all authors approved the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: A.K. reports consulting fees from Abbvie, Alynylam, BMS, Cota Health, GSK, Janssen, Oncopeptide, and Takeda. S.S. reports research funding from Magenta Therapeutics, BMS, Allogene, and Janssen and consultancy with Magenta Therapeutics, BMS, Janssen, Sanofi, and Oncopeptides. T.N. reports clinical trial support to the institution from Novartis and clinical trial support (drug only supply) to the institution from Kaytopharm. D.K.H. reports financial relationships within the past 12 months from OncLive (honoraria). L.D.A. reports financial relationships within the 36 months at UTSW with GSK (research grants), Janssen (research grants), BMS (research grants), Celgene (research grants), and Karyopharm (research grants); consulting fees and advisory board activity with GSK, Janssen, BMS, Celgene, Amgen, Oncopeptides, Karyopharm, and Prothena; and limits income to under 5K per company per year; DSMB: Prothena. R.B. reports financial relationships within the past 36 months with Sanofi (consulting), SparkCures (consulting), Guidepoint Global (consulting), Pack Health (institutional research funding), and University of California (employment). N.B. reports consultancy with Jansse and Sanofi and speaker bureau Amgen, Sanofi, and Oncopeptides. H.L. reports research support from Takeda; consulting fees from Prothena and Karyopharm; payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers, bureaus, manuscript writing, or education events from Sanofi/Genzyme; and participation on a data safety monitoring board or advisory board for BMS/Celgene, Janssen, Takeda, Caelum Biosciences, Karyopharm, Sanofi/Genzyme, and Pfizer. J.K. reports financial relationships within the past 36 months from OncLive (honoraria). B.D. reports financial relationships within the past 36 months with Celegene/BMS (honorarium), GSK (honorarium), and Karyopharm (honorarium) and has served as an advisory board member for Janssen, Arcellx, Natera, GSK, Amgen, and Takeda. C.L. reports advisory board membership with Janssen and BMS. H.M. reports having received research grant from Janssen and advisory board fees from BMS/Celgene, Takeda, Janssen, Amgen, GSK, and Sanofi. S.K. reports research funding for clinical trials to Abbvie, Amgen, BMS, Carsgen, Janssen, Astra-Zeneca, Novartis, Roche-Genentech, Takeda, Tenebio, and Molecular Templates; consulting/advisory board participation (with no personal payments) for Abbvie, Amgen, BMS, Janssen, Roche-Genentech, Takeda, Astra-Zeneca, Bluebird Bio, Epizyme, Secura Biotherapeutics, Monterosa therapeutics, Trillium, and (with personal payment) Oncopeptides, Beigene, Antengene, and GLH Pharma. M.Q. reports research funding from Janssen, NeXimmune, Angiocrine, Bioline, and Amgen, participation on an advisory board from Oncopeptides, and participation on a data safety monitoring board with Autolus. A. D’Souza reports research funding from Takeda, TeneoBio, Janssen, Sanofi, Regeneron, Prothena, and Caelum; board membership for BMS, Imbrium, Pfizer, and Prothena; and consultancy with Janssen. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Anita D’Souza, Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR), Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin. Ste 5500, 9200 W Wisconsin Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53226; e-mail: andsouza@mcw.edu.
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Author notes
CIBMTR supports accessibility of research in accord with National Institutes of Health (NIH) Data Sharing Policy and National Cancer Institute (NCI) Cancer Moonshot Public Access and Data Sharing Policy. The CIBMTR only releases deidentified datasets that comply with all relevant global regulations regarding privacy and confidentiality. Contact the corresponding author for data sharing.
The full-text version of this article contains a data supplement.