Multiple Myeloma - Survival Rate Statistics by Hospital
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Impressive Multiple Myeloma Life Expectancy and Survival Rate! & Cure?  -  The Arkansas Approach,  UAMS's Total Therapy 3,  by Gary Petersen and Priya Menon

2/21/2013

45 Comments

 
PictureUAMS - MIRT
There is probably not one subject of myeloma that has been debated more by so many in countless forums, and that is the subject of CURE for multiple myeloma.  And there is not one program or person that has been under the microscope more than the UAMS-MIRT(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences - Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy) program at Little Rock, Arkansas and the MIRT program director Dr. Bart Barlogie.   The first question might be why Little Rock?  What on earth could have happened to make Little Rock a focus of such Multiple Myeloma debate.

UAMS waiting room banter suggests it just could have been bad luck on the part of one very wealthy multiple myeloma patient.  Sam Walton of Walmart fame was diagnosed with myeloma, and went to M.D. Anderson in Houston, a world renowned cancer center.  His doctor at M.D. Anderson was Dr. Bart Barlogie.  Dr. Barlogie then established the world class MIRT(Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy) at UAMS(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences) just a stones throw away from Walmart's Bentonville, AR headquarters.  Coincidence? Wives' tale? Walton's money and influence? or UAMS's eye for talent and opportunity?   The story remains an integral part of the Little Rock lore.  However interesting this might be it is just not  true.  Since this article was first published UAMS assures me it was the latter and stated: " Dr. Barlogie came to Little Rock because he was offered the opportunity to take a leadership role in Hematology/Oncology research at the UAMS Cancer Institute and to ultimately build a program dedicated to research in/treatment of multiple myeloma and related diseases."  In addition, Barlogie has confirmed the UAMS account of this myth. 

Now for the sake of full disclosure, I was treated first at Mayo and then at UAMS, and I am like most patients who become vested in the program that they chose to follow.  It is for this reason, Priya Menon of Cure Talk was kind enough to co-author and edit this article and promised to keep it grounded and fact based.  Her take on the data and my analysis follows this segment.  I will not get into a debate about the UAMS claim of a 60% cure rate for the 85% of their patients that are considered low risk, however I will share the most recent data from the TT3 program with the multiple myeloma patient community.   I do happen to be one of the hopeful that pray it is true, and that my myeloma will never come back,

What is TT3 anyway?  It happens to be midway in the progression of clinical trial at UAMS that started with TT1, and then went on all the way to TT6.  The TT stands for Total Therapy and became well know as an approach that uses all available drugs in up front treatment for childhood leukemia(ALL) at St. Judes Children's Hospital.  The thought being that the best chance of eliminating all disease is at the beginning of treatment when the cancer has not been exposed to any drugs, and has not developed any resistant.   This approach has saved the lives of many children and has moved the cure rate from less than 10%  to  95% in childhood leukemia.  UAMS uses this same approach for multiple myeloma.    For TT3 it represents induction, two stem cell transplants, consolidation, and 3 years of maintenance, with the use of  the drug combinations VDT-PACE, Melphalan, and VTD.  A more in depth description of the protocol can found in a two part series by Nick Van Dyk and Pat Killingsworth called "Total Therapy Demystified" if you just click on PART1 and then PART2.

I often talk about a treatment continuum that goes from Dr. Berenson's "Less is Best" to Dr. Barlogie's "More is Cure", and therefore UAMS represents one extreme on this continuum.  What I have found is that the top 50 to 75 skilled multiple myeloma professionals in the world may have very different approaches to treatment, but all far outperform the published life expectancy and survival rate statistics.  And as you see on the home page of www.myelomasurvival.com Dr. Barlogie and Dr. Berenson have some of the very best results, and they have vastly different treatment philosophies. 


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So how do the numbers for TT3 look.  If you tour the web you will find graphs that show TT3 results for 3 and sometimes 5 years, however when I was at my annual checkup in January at UAMS, Dr. Barlogie was kind enough to show me his most recent information on the 9 year Overall Survival for TT3.  The graph is as shown to the left.  More graphs of the TT3 data can be seen at the end of this article.  What it shows is an OS for 9 years of 64%, and a relative survival(multiple myeloma deaths only) of 75.7%.   This is no less than "OUTSTANDING" and maybe even Miraculous.  This data includes 15% high risk patients, and unfortunately most of the high risk patients will not have made it to 9 years, because no center has been able to unlock the key to high risk survival, and it remains at just over 2 years at UAMS. The National Cancer Institutes SEER data for 9 year relative survival is just 19.6%, therefore if you are under the care of Bart Barlogie at UAMS you are 3.3 times more likly to survive 9 years than at the average SEER faciltiy.  This is the best long term  life expectancy data yet provided to www.myelomasurvival.com.

So why isn't everyone using a TT3 type of protocol?    There are a number of reasons, some of which include the following.

1) Some people just don't believe the results are real!  This even when the results are being audited as required for all clinical trial studies. UAMS as a member of SWOG (Southwest Oncology Group) use the firm Cancer Research and Biostatistics
2) Many patients think that this can only be done at UAMS, where I would bet most of the 500 CIBMTR(Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research)Transplant Hospitals are qualified to accomplish this protocol.
3) There are a number of programs that have excellent results and the patient may chose to select one that is championed by another skilled multiple myeloma professional.  Like the "Less is Best"  program of the IMBCR  or mSmart protocol of Mayo.
4) The TT3 protocol requires two stem cell transplants and not all patients are eligible for this procedure because of poor health or comorbidities.
5) Older patients may chose to not have a stem cell transplant and go the novel therapy route.
6) Many multiple myeloma specialists believe that the treatment is just too aggressive.
7) Insurance issues, like the fact Medicare will pay for only one Stem Cell Transplant, or a qualified center is not in your PPO network, or it is not an approved procedure. 

I would argue that as long as you have a skilled multiple myeloma professional on your team, and have access to a well established transplant program, that a TT protocol could be duplicated at many locations around the world.  However, I would add that the UAMS program is the location that initiated this protocol for MM, and has the most experience (over 10,000 transplants) with its application.


One thing that you will find is that there are a number of programs around the United States that most likely utilize a similar protocol or one that is more aggressive than the average program.  The reason is because the doctors at these locations obtained much of their multiple myeloma experience at UAMS, and under the tutelage of Dr. Barlogie.  These programs include the following:

Sundar Jagannath, MD - The Mount Sinai Medical Center, NY, NY
Jayesh Mehta, MD - Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL

David Siegel, MD - John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ
Seema Singhal, MD - Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL
Guido Tricot, MD - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics,Iowa City, Iowa
David Vesole, MD - John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Maurizio Zangari, MD -  Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, Utah

The data that Dr. Barlogie provided represents a conservative estimate of life expectancy in excess of 15 years, which is 3.8 times the published SEER life expectancy of 4 years.  The TT3 program had introduced the new novel agents of Velcade and Revlimid into the Total Therapy protocol and is a leap forward over the prior TT1 and TT2 treatment regimens.

Priya Menon provided the following take on this most recent TT3 data:

Total Therapy has been evolving for the past 20 years and has gone through several different protocols. TT3 protocol is significant since apart from its miraculous results, the protocol used two novel agents – Revlimid and Velcade at a time when these new drugs were saved to be used in the event of a relapse in other cancer centers.

Now, a little detailed look at TT3 protocol would put the current 9 years overall survival graph under scrutiny more in perspective and why we call it the Total Therapy. As Gary Petersen mentions,

Total Therapy 3 (TT3) combines an exhaustive multi-drug regimen with stem cell transplants. Patients are given two cycles of VTD-PACE; this is essentially Velcade (bortezomib), thalidomide, dexamethasone and continuous infusion of Cisplatin, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide for 4 days. Two stem cell transplants with melphalan follow this. Consolidation therapy involves VTD-PACE and a total of 3 years of maintenance (first year with VTD, second and third year with TD).

We know that TT3 trial results were very encouraging and they had to be confirmed. For this, additional patients were enrolled in a TT3B trial in which the Velcade as maintenance therapy was administered for 3 years (instead of one) and Revlimid was used instead of thalidomide.

Myeloma patients were classified as low-risk or high-risk on the basis of their genes, and a difference in clinical outcomes were observed between low risk and high risk myeloma patients. 83% of participating patients were classified as low-risk myeloma patients and these patients demonstrated better OS, EFS, and CR in TT3 trials. Thus, without any doubt, TT3 is definitely a successful option for low-risk myeloma patients.

At 5 years, the overall survival reported in TT3 trials was 72%. The graph showing 64% overall survival at 9 years is truly phenomenal, pointing towards almost 15 years or more of life expectancy for the population under study. If the data includes both low risk and high-risk patients, this is definitely a significant treatment for myeloma patients. For the low risk population in the study, OS at nine years is 70%!

The high cure fractions observed in TT3 led to the design of TT4 protocol aimed at reducing dosage without compromising on achieved results TT5 for newly diagnosed high-risk patients, and TT6 for previously treated patients.

Now, only if UAMS were to be more open about sharing their data with outside evaluators, the scrutiny and suspicion that surrounds UAMS trial results would vanish and myeloma patients would have no qualms of considering UAMS TT protocols as a powerful therapy option.

All is not Roses however in the data, as was pointed out to me by Nick Van Dyk after this post was published. You can find Nick's extensive and exceptionally well written article at
the link:  http://nvdmyeloma.blogspot.com/2013/03/lies-damn-lies-and-statistics.html   I may blog about this subject myself in more detail at a later date.  One of the graphs below shows the CRD(Complete Response Duration) and previous graphs had shown them to have flattened out at 3 years which would indicate CURE.  However,  the new graph still shows a decline at 8 years, so the estimate for cure for this subset of low risk patients has yet to flatten out and confirm cure.  BUMMER!! 

Thank you Priya for helping me to provide a balanced analysis of the data.  A bio for Dr. Barlogie is below.

As always, may God Bless your myeloma journey/ Gary Petersen and Priya Menon




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Bart Barlogie, M.D., Ph.D.

Director of the
UAMS Myeloma Institute

Professor of Medicine and Pathology

Tommy May Chair in Oncology
Director, Myeloma Institute


M.D. Heidelberg University, University of Munich 
Ph.D. Max Planck Institute for Medical Research 
Residency (internal medicine, hematology and infectious diseases, rheumatology, nephrology, cardiology, gastroenterology), University of Muenster. 
Clinical Fellowship (oncology), M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute.

Numerous Professional Appointments at M.D. Anderson, including:

Professor of Medicine, Department of Hematology
Professor of Pathology, Department of Pathology
Chief, Section of Experimental Therapeutics, Department of Hematology
Chief, Cytometry Center, Department of Hematology

Honors and Awards:

Distinguished Alumnus Award – UT MD Anderson Cancer Center – 1998
Jan Waldenstrom Award for Myeloma Research – 1999
Celgene Career Achievement Award in Hematology Research – 2002
Robert A. Kyle Lifetime Achievement Award, International Myeloma Foundation – 2004
National Physician of the Year Award for Clinical Excellence, Castle Connolly Medical Ltd., 2006

Society Memberships:

American Society for Clinical Investigation
American Society of Clinical Oncology
American Society of Hematology
Association of American Physicians
International Society of Hematology
The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research

Additional Relevant Information:

Dr. Barlogie is an internationally recognized authority on the use of novel therapies to combat multiple myeloma for improved patient outcome. On the faculty at UAMS since 1989, Dr. Barlogie has built the largest center in the world devoted exclusively to clinical care for and research in multiple myeloma. More than 9,000 patients from every state in the U.S. and more than 50 countries have come to the Myeloma Institute. 

With a keen insight into the biology of myeloma, Dr. Barlogie pioneered the use of tandem peripheral stem cell transplant for multiple myeloma. Other firsts under Dr. Barlogie’s leadership include performing transplants on an outpatient basis, safely transplanting patients age 70 and older, transplanting patients with renal disease, and introducing thalidomide as anti-angiogenesis therapy. Dr. Barlogie’s Total Therapy approach, by which multiple agents are provided upfront, has continually increased median survival, with a projected median survival of 15 years for patients enrolled in the third Total Therapy protocol.

A consummate clinician scientist, Dr. Barlogie has authored more than 544 papers in prestigious journals such as Blood, New England Journal of Medicine, Journal of Clinical Oncology, British Journal of Haematology, and Cancer. He has more than 595 abstracts and 75 book chapters to his credit, and serves on the editorial board of numerous journals.


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45 Comments
john link
2/21/2013 08:33:18 am

Gary
Awesome job (as usual )
Thanks
John

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Gary Petersen link
2/21/2013 11:23:09 am

John, I am happy that you found it of value, and for the kind words. Gary

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Priya link
2/26/2013 08:44:24 pm

Gary, loved working with you on this. Thank you.

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Gary Petersen link
2/27/2013 01:54:01 am

Priya, we will have to do this again! Thank you so much for all you do for the multiple myeloma patient community. Gary

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Tom
1/16/2014 04:11:01 pm

My mother is the longest known survivor of myeloma and participated in TT1. She told the story of being in the hospital next to Sam Walton. He absolutely helped to fund research at that time and deserves a lot of credit. If not for his funds and Dr. Barlogie's research and dedication to finding a cure she would never have lived so long.

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Linda Elliott
3/20/2015 04:13:07 am

I WAS CURED WITH A BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT WHEN I WAS 35 YEARS OLD, AND I AM NOW 62 AND HAVEN'T SEEN AN ONCOLOGIST SINCE......I CAN'T EVEN REMEMBER!!! 20 YEARS AGO, MAYBE.

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Josanne Glanz Moore
1/27/2014 08:00:25 am

My brother, Jeff Glanz, is a 26-year survivor of multiple myeloma because of Dr. Bart Barlogie's research and treatment all these years. I thank God that Dr. Barlogie has the burden to continue this most valued research and treatment.

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Catherine
2/12/2014 11:52:08 am

My father/ in-law was just diagnosed with multiple myeloma stage 1. We are in the Detroit area. Can we make am appointment to see you. ? We were told treatment start until stage. 3

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n wilson
2/16/2014 09:10:57 pm

Desparate to find a specialist following dr. barlogie thoughts in Cape Town. South Africa.
Can you help?

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Lisa
2/27/2014 12:59:22 am

My mom age 71 was just diagnosed w stage 3 mm. She is being treated at Univ of Penn. She lives in Philly. she started zometa, rev and dex in Dec. This is her third month. I get her blood work emailed to me. Is he was told that after this first round of treatment which I believe is 6 months that she is candidate for SCT. She is I great health except for mm...we were told she does not hv an aggressive form. Thank God. But I'm wondering what options we have ...are we on the right path? She already said she didn't want to go thru SCT but she has no info or any education about SCT OR MM. My brother n I have done extensive research n hv educated ourselves...she n. Y dad have not..... Any thoughts? Is there a way I can contact Dr B and send him all her results and he give his thoughts as to treatment...path etc?

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Joyce Schultz
5/7/2014 12:59:55 am

I was wondering when comparing these life expectancies, do they consider the condition of the patient at the start? For example, if someone is older and poor health, they wouldn't choose the Ark approach, hence Ark is starting with a healthier patient. Also, I'd like to know of the patients alive, but with poorer quality of life, due to damage from lots of chemo. These also need to be discussed. Thank you.

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fran
7/28/2014 02:20:29 am

I don't know if you personally or someone you know has mm. I can only tell you that I was diagnosed in 1996. I'm sitting here in Little Rock going for my yearly check-up. I'm from NJ, it's my choice that I come see Dr. Barlogie year after year for a head to toe check up. I could have it done locally, but I get yo see Dr. Barlogie and the staff and equipment are state of the art. I have a doctor near home who checks my blood regularly. After treatment which consisted of the above procedures and maintenance, I continued to work for 20 years until my retirement. I never felt that my quality of life permanently was affected. I was able to do all that I had done previously. Eventually. The first year was a little rough. But as I sit here 18 years later, my recovery speaks for itself. Didn't mean to go on and on but I been praising Dr. B. And Little Rock for years.

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edward wilk link
8/14/2014 02:04:04 pm

my wife (72) was diagnosed with M-gus in Jan '13 and stg 3 MM in Mar'14. We came to Little Rock in June. We are now home and she is in remission. For those of you who are new to this, its very scary.
You're afraid that the stories you hear before you get here are just hype. But when you hear these same success stories from patient after patient after you get here, you become confident that UAMS &
Dr. Barlogue is the place to be.

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Gary Petersen link
9/22/2014 01:44:45 am

Well said Ed.

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Richard turner
11/14/2014 12:05:09 pm

I've been a patient of Dr. Barlogie for 18 months now. When I arrived at UAMS, I was wearing an upper body brace, & getting around with a walker. After preliminary exams, it was discovered, I had 15 fractured vertebrae & 9 broken ribs.
I've been through Dr. Barlogie's TT4 treatment & are back to most of the normal activities that were common to me before I was diagnosed with this disease.
To me, if you are diagnosed with MM, UAMS is the only place to go.

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Mary Stennis
12/30/2014 11:46:03 am

I was diagnosed with MM January 29,2010(my 67th BD not the gift I wanted). My local doctor told me about UAMS and my husband started researching. After I read about MIRT on the Internet, there was no doubt I wanted to go there. After all the testing, I was low risk. I started the treatment March 2010, had one stem cell and did the three year maintenance. I continue to have my labs checked and go back for testings. When I return in March, will be my longest between visits -one year. I cannot come up with the words to say how glad I went to UAMS. The doctors, nurses and staff are the best. In my area, I have met several who were diagonised with MM. I tell them to run don't walk to UAMS if you want the best there is to treat MM. I'm so thankful I did.

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Gary R. Petersen link
12/31/2014 03:52:58 am

Richard and Mary, two more great stories of success at UAMS. These testimonials continue to confirm my belief UAMS is one of the Best of the Best, and Dr. Barlogie is one of my GREAT EIGHT of worldwide myeloma specialists. Good luck and may God Bless your myeloma journey. Gary

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Robert Lewy
4/1/2015 02:12:31 am

I knew Bart from MD Anderson and applauded his MIRT move when I happened to get MM I saw him first, but insurance paid only half of 2 year program so I got my tandem I Houston. then Revlimid maintenance with CR for 7 years. Overall 10 years on velcade and Dex.
I have two comments
1. I'm. It so sure the VTDPACE would be either prescribed by a local MD of paid for by insurance. Guess Bart had a dispensation
2. I got just a little Thal as part of my induction snd it wrecked me. I would have gotten it on TT3 and doubtless dropped out. In my Texas program I was randomized to Thal Dex but was able to get Rev on a compassionate basis good for 7 years of CR as I said.
So there are easier ways and Bart told me I was high risk. But the pendulum is moving in his direction with heavy chemo 3 days prior to ASCT and lengthy consolidation
Bravo to Bart!

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Robert
4/1/2015 04:10:51 am

PS
Regarding very long term cures my own transplant MD quotes 24-28% as those who get myeloma, are treated initially and never require retreatment!

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Gary Petersen link
4/3/2015 07:52:12 am

Robert, sounds like you found a way to get a similar treatment somewhere other than at UAMS. I often wonder why others do not do what you did. You are so beating the odds, because when you were diagnosed and high risk most people quote 2 years. Good luck and may God Bless your ongoing myeloma journey. Gary

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patricia sutherland
6/27/2015 10:41:56 am

I am not a patient, my niece is, I am here in Little Rock as her care giver while she has her second round of chemo and second stem cell transplant.

I am writing this as a care giver who goes to the clinic with her daily and sees the care and attention she receives from everyone at the institute. I mean everyone, from the lobby desk attendant to Dr. Barlogie.

She never leaves without a complete understanding of her treatment and what her day to day results and labs are. I have to be honest, I wasn't sure how much attention she would get from Dr. Barlogie directly but I was pleasantly surprised when I went to her meeting with him. He knew her instantly, knew her individual situation, and recommend changes to her protocol right then and there with explanations.

She is a young women who is facing a tough battle but I truly believe she feels armed with knowledge and confidence in her team. As a care giver, I thank you and feel this is so important to anyone persons overall treatment and well being.

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Joni Epps
1/7/2016 10:57:27 pm

I have just been diagnosed with SMM. I am a 52 year old female in excellent health. I can't even begin to wrap my head around the fact that I have cancer. I am a 5 year breast cancer survivor. I never had chemo or radiation for my breast cancer, only tamoxifen. I have submitted my medical information to UAMS and am waiting to hear if the insurance will approve it. My free light chains have gone from 100 in 10/19/15 to over 300 in 1/22/16. I am not sure what that means but the doctor at the university of Michigan said this along with other tests suggest I am nearing stage 1 MM. Any other advise for researching this would be appreciated.

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Gary Petersen link
1/8/2016 11:39:31 am

Joni,sounds like you have already gone thru a lot. There is a great group of smoldering patients at the link: https://twitter.com/DanaHolmes911 UAMS does extensive testing and the gene expression profiling they do will be a great tool to determine if you are now symptomatic. If you have low risk features you have a lower chance of progression, but if high risk about 15% of patients the chance of progression is quite high. Dr. Irene Ghobrial of Dana Farber is doing a lot of work with smoldering myeloma and if you can not get covered for UAMS, she would be a great choice.

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Bonnie Falbo
2/11/2016 04:23:24 am

My husband,now age 67 has been monitored for MGUS for 8 years. He was just diagnosed with Smouldering Myeloma. We live in Va. and want a second opinion on the diagnosis and risk group he has been assigned....Intermediate, before we pursue treatment options. We want to make sure he's not high risk and should be starting a clinical trial.
Every time I google smouldering myeloma Dr. Landgren's work at MSK comes up. Would you support our decision to begin by seeing him or would you recommend we start with Dr Bargolie? And if it's Dr Bargolie, do we go to Mt. Sinai where he is now or to UAMS?
Thank you so much for the amazing support you provide.

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Gary Petersen link
2/23/2016 07:09:10 pm

Bonnie, sorry for the delay in responding. I had some website problems. You have two excellent choices, and can not go wrong with either choice. Dr. Landgren is exceptional and you would not go wrong with him. Dr. Barlogie was my doctor and I know he does the Gene Expression Profiling which will answer your question. I am now a 10 year survivor and MRD negative for 2 years and I can not say more for Dr. Barlogie and UAMS. Dr. Van Rhee at UAMS is another excellent choice.

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rafiat
5/21/2016 10:48:35 am

My mum has just being diagnosed wit multiple myeloma. It's low risk. Please where do u think she should go for treatment and how do we get in touch with the doctor and hospital to go.

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Gary R. Petersen link
5/22/2016 12:41:39 pm

Rafiat, I have answered your request in more detail off line, however I have a listing of myeloma specialists at the link: http://myelomasurvival.com/myeloma-specialists-listing.html
It also includes lists from the Myeloma Crowd, IMF, Myeloma Beacon, and others. Good luck and may God Bless your families myeloma journey. Gary

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Peg Welch
6/2/2016 08:06:28 pm

I am newly diagnosed, applying to run, not delay....and get into UAMS. I am scared because I am high risk, I believe and it seems the high risk patients are not included in all the above wonderful comments.

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Mathew hoff
8/11/2018 08:13:34 pm

I'm also a 47 year old male recently diagnosed high risk and would also like to apply with no delayunfortunately I'm not stage 1would like any resources or two apply with no delay thank you

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Debra Suhr link
7/13/2016 08:55:38 pm

I am posting this because my sister has recently been diagnosed with mm. Her final prognosis is high rick most aggressive, lowest prognosis by her Oncologist. So she decided to go to Cancer Centers of America in Chicago, Illinois. My question after reading this website is. Do CCOA do the same protocol for high risk as they do here at this website talks about. Because after reading that this place is treating mm only, do you think she should go here or keep her plans for leaving next Wednesday for Chicago. Thank you for such in depth information.

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Gary R Petersen link
7/15/2016 10:41:21 am

Debra, CCOA is not a company a hear much about with myeloma. They do provide survival data for many cancers, but not for myeloma. I can only think they are not skilled in myeloma. High risk is a very difficult disease presentation, so I would find a myeloma specialist has shown some skill in the treatment of high risk myeloma. Dr. Barlogie at Mt. Sinai in New York has said he has great success with the new check point inhibitors as part of the regimen. He mentioned that UAMS was also working with this regimen. Good luck and may God Bless your families myeloma journey. Gary

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Maria Elena Reyna
9/14/2016 09:04:06 am

Peg Welch, I'm in the same boat with you. I was diagnosed high risk one year ago, am currently on my third line of treatment and was recently told that I may also have pre-leukemia markers from my most recent bone marrow aspiration. I continue to be active and appear to be in fairly good health, but a year of chemo has really impacted my neutrophils, WBC, platelets, etc. I'm also wondering what is available for those of us that are High Risk? My body seems to have developed a resistance to Revlimid, Velcade, Kyprolis....I am currently on a 2-3 month plan of Daratumumab in the hopes of getting my cancer number down (currently at 50% cancer in my plasma - when diagnosed I was 96% and have been up and down since) then hopefully a BMT, but don't feel like it's doing much. Does anyone have any words of wisdom or counsel? I would love to participate in a trial study for immunology therapy (CAR-T) but may be disqualified due to a secondary cancer. Ugh, really drawing the short straws here!
I am currently being treated at UT Southwestern in Dallas. I am 48 years old, btw, and still have 5 kids to raise and a husband to love on!

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Linda Blaine
1/5/2017 05:53:55 pm

I was told I had multiple myeloma in July of 2011.Did 2 stem cell transplants at shady side hospital in Pittsburgh pa. And I'm on revlimid 10mg. Doing everything I did before I got the horrible news! I have a great Dr. at Arnold Palmers at
Latrobe pa. Dr.Sulecki I o him my life!!!!

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Dean
1/20/2017 07:34:48 pm

After two months of research, this is the best article and information I have come across.

I was diagnosed with Myeloma on January 3rd. I am almost 41. My BMB came back at 12%. I had to push for the biopsy, as the doctor thought I was too young to have MM.

I also have below normal red blood cell count and my urinalysis shows excess protein.

While I do not check the boxes for CRAB or FISH, I do have Myeloma. The doctors in Colorado want to go the 'wait and monitor' route, which I do not agree with, nor do my friends and family.

My maternal grandmother died from Myeloma at age 37, in the late 1960's. My father's brother was diagnosed at age 67 and is now 70. He was treated at Little Rock.

I would like to ask for your advice on my decision to head to Little Rock. I do not understand how anyone in the medical field would think it is better to wait until my bones have holes in them or my kidneys are being damaged, before starting treatment.

Plus, I know at Little Rock, they have the technology to assess whether I am High-Risk or Low-Risk, which is so important.

Thank you for your time and thank you for this resource.

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Gary Petersen link
1/22/2017 09:53:25 am

Dean, thank you for your kind words. I am always thankful to hear I am providing a survive to my fellow patients. At your age, I would certainly be looking for CURE! If you are considered to be active myeloma, I could see no reason not to treat early and aggressively while the myeloma has not had a chance to be drug resistant or develop more resistant clones. UAMS has one of the best programs in the nation, with several outstanding doctors. My favorite is Dr. Fritz Van Rhee, now that my doctor, Dr. Barlogie has moved to Mt Sinai, NY. If you are smoldering myeloma, most treatment has been for high risk to progress smoldering myeloma which is projected to progress within two years. High risk smoldering myeloma has nothing to do with FISH or GEP(gene expression profiling), and you can see the definition at http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/bloodjournal/125/20/3069.full.pdf

If you are just smoldering myeloma, and not high risk smoldering Dr. Irene Ghobrial of Dana Farber has a program where you are closely watched and treatment is started as soon as possible to prevent CRAB. You and your family are so right to think you should hit it hard and as soon as possible! I have kidney damage, and others have bone damage, stokes, pneumonia, and internal bleeds. Link: http://www.myelomacrowd.org/full-show-preventing-myeloma-gets-started-dr-irene-ghobrial-md-dana-farber-cancer-institue/
Good luck and God Bless your myeloma journey/Gary Petersen

Reply
BRUCE R MCCRORY
6/6/2017 01:13:20 pm

I have stage 3 multimil myeloma diagnosed 5 weeks. Now being treated with chemo and also on dialysis 3 days a week. I have about 7 % kidney function. Has your group has any success with restoring kidney function related to the MM. would I be a candidate for your clinic with this issue. Bone related issues are of concern ,but not the major concern at this stage

Reply
Bruce McCrory
6/7/2017 04:12:25 am

I have multiple myeloma. Diagnosed 7 weeks ago. Is stage 3 due to it attacking my kidneys. Have 7% function and on dialysis mwf. Have been on chemo treatment since 5.1 17. Bone is is not severe.

Would I be future candidate for your program? I have not seen any references to kidney recovery experences. I am treated b by Dr. Sarathia inFlorida Hospital, new smyrna, beach,fl.
I sent email yesterday, but was not able to respond to your reply. Process again


Reply
Albert
6/13/2017 06:13:13 pm

Gary, I just came across this site while doing some research. Great info on MM. I just lost my 78 year old Mom to MM on June 2, 2017 after 13 years with MM. I was recently diagnosed with MGus back in Sept. 2016 at age 50 with no other symptoms. I'm in the process to go to MD Anderson to seek a better plan than my current Dr. "wait and see approach". After reading your blog I wish that I was going to UAMS instead. Nevertheless, I will see how it goes and compare the two. Hopefully, I can beat this thing.

Reply
Gary Petersen link
6/15/2017 06:12:29 pm

Albert, Dr. Orlowski of M.D. Andersen is exceptional and will be a great second opinion. Dr. Ghobrial of Dana Farber has a program to follow MGUS patients and you may want to sign up for it as well. The link to the Dana Farber program is http://www.dana-farber.org/Research/Departments-and-Centers/Blood-Cancer-Prevention-of-Progression-Clinic.aspx
Best Regards/Gary

Reply
Fred Steele
4/15/2018 02:51:56 pm

Hi Gary, I just read your article. My wife was diagnosed with MM 11/17. She is starting on her fifth found of 2 week on, 1 wk. off of RVd tomorrow. Her numbers are looking good now, according to the local oncologist, (near Charlotte, NC) so he says a SCT is next. We are trying to find a STC facility with better results than normal, and your article was very encouraging about UAMS. Do you know of any more local facilities that follow the protocols developed by Dr. Bargolie, or should we just try to get to UAMS?
I would greatly appreciate any input that you may have. This SCT requirement was quite a surprise to us a when we heard it a couple weeks ago. A few local (200 mi. radius) hospitals have declined to do the SCT due to our lack of insurance. We are self-pay with a Christian co-op called Samaritan's Ministries and possible VA benefits available, which are still in the works, as her first appointment with them is April 26. If you will respond vial private e-mail, that would be preferable. Thank you for the myelomasurvival.com website and your article. I was able to get some info. on here that seems to be hard to find elsewhere.

Shalom,
Fred Steele

Reply
Yvonne Frauenfelder link
11/19/2018 10:45:05 am

Hello -

I understand that the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale is outstanding for the treatment of Multiple Myeloma. Do the survival statistics match those of UAMS? Thank you.

Reply
Gary Petersen link
11/24/2018 06:01:57 pm

Yvonne, Both are excellent institutions. My data is now a little aged so you cannot go wrong with Dr. Fonseca of Mayo Scottsdale or Dr. Van Rhee of UAMS. Good luck and God Bless your families myeloma journey/Gary

Reply
Raymond Paglialong
5/20/2019 02:14:43 pm

Just found out I have s m m and need information to go here for treatment

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shachisaran link
12/25/2020 04:39:55 am

Nice information!

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NCERT solutions for class 9 Maths link
1/12/2021 03:41:03 am

Thanks for sharing this post!

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