Multiple Myeloma - Survival Rate Statistics by Hospital
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Our Approach To Myeloma Care Must Change!  To Have Change, Something Must Change!

6/20/2018

5 Comments

 

Einstein once said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.  We patients frequently look at our symptoms of exhaustion, bone and joint pain, anemia, and kidney issues as part of the aging process, and often our General Practitioners look at us in a similar manner.  In general this results in delayed diagnosis with late stage myeloma and end organ damage.  In fact, depending on which study you read, only 6% to 23% of patients are found in stage one, while 73% to 94% are not found till they are either ISS(International Staging System) stage 2 or stage 3.  This would make little difference if life expectancy were the same for all patients no matter what the stage, however there is a significant difference.  An NCBI (National Center For Biotechnology Information) study reports the following life expectancy by ISS stage for myeloma.

Picture

So, if found in stage 1 you should live 5.2 years longer than if found in stage 3 or 240% longer.  And if found in stage 1 instead of stage 2 you would live 2.4 more years or 165% longer.   Let me assure you any clinical trial which could provide this result would be considered miraculous. 

But given no change in what we do currently, the National Cancer Institute will continue to report 28% of myeloma patients will die within two years.  This has remained the same for the last 6 years.  In the development of the website www.myelomasurvival.com I received 2 year survival statistics from 6 exceptional myeloma  treatment facilities.  These facilities included Seattle Cancer Care, Cleveland Clinic, Medical College of Wisconsin, MSKCC, and The James at Ohio State.  The average 2 year death rate for these six locations was a remarkable 4%, or  7 times lower than the NCI published rate for the entire US.  Unfortunately as noted in my last blog post, 70 to 80 percent of myeloma patients are not being seen by a myeloma specialist.  And the conundrum is that the current myeloma specialists are nearly fully booked and it would take years to get another 70 to 80% increase in myeloma specialists to handle the added work load.


So what is it then that needs to change? Dr. Irene Ghobrial of Dana Farber Cancer Institute said it best when she highlighted the following on a Cure Talk broadcast:

Her point was simple, straight forward, logical, and impossible to argue against.  Multiple Myeloma is the only cancer where we wait for it to metastasize and show organ, bone damage, or anemia  before we begin treatment. 

She and many other specialists are coming to the conclusion that screening, early diagnosis, and early treatment is the future of myeloma treatment.  There are a number of steps that must be taken to reach this goal.  Those steps are as follows:

Step 1 -  We need to prove early treatment will result in improved Overall Survival.

Step 2 - We need to determine which MGUS and smoldering patients will progress to active myeloma and are candidates for early treatment.

The first step has been proven with a number of trials in process and completed for high risk smoldering myeloma patients.  The Spanish Group in Salamanca were the first to show the success of treating patients with Rd vs. the standard of care to watch and wait until the myeloma becomes active to treat.  Dr. Maria -Victoria Mateos reported with a median follow-up of 75 months there was a 57% reduction in the risk of death for the early treatment with lenalidomide-dexamethasone vs not treatment arm. Dr. Mateos will be on Cure Talks in the near future to discuss her excellent work with smoldering myeloma patients.  Since this initial study many more have followed two of which are considered CURE trials, the Spanish groups CESAR trial and US trial named ASCENT.  Step one is well on its way!

The second step is being advanced by a number of organizations and myeloma centers of excellence.  However the work of Dr. Ghorbial of Dana Farber has been one of the leaders in this effort.  Their pCrowd program is designed to uncover the answers to Step 2.  To view this program CLICK HERE.

To complete this post we must add a third step, and this just may be the most important step.

Step 3 - We MUST find them early to treat them early. 

Because 73 to 94% of patients are not found until they have either stage 2 or 3 myeloma, there must be a way to find these patients before their  disease has progressed to these later stages.  The iStopMM program in Iceland to test every person over 40 years of age was a great first step.  For Iceland this just might save many lives and years of life.  A great next step is the StandUp2Cancer initiative headed by Dr. Ghobrial of Dana Farber and Dr. 
Ivan Borrello of John Hopkins.  They will lead an outstanding team and test 50,000 people who are at higher risk of getting myeloma.  The target population for the survey includes people with first-degree relatives who have had multiple myeloma, and African-Americans, since African-Americans are three times more likely than whites to develop the precursor conditions, and tend to develop them at an earlier age. You can read about this program if you CLICK HERE.  Hopefully this early testing will one day include all people over 40 years of age.

I hope this gets to the point where all myeloma is found early and cured, but until then it just may be up to the patient to DEMAND a light chain and M Spike test if they have any of the the risk factors above or have any of the following symptoms: exhaustion, bone pain, anemia, kidney issue, confusion,  and numbness are all symptoms of advancing myeloma.  A more complete list of symptoms can be found if you CLICK HERE. 

Good luck and may God Bless your Cancer Journey.   For more information on multiple myeloma survival rates and treatments CLICK HERE and you can follow me on twitter at: https://twitter.com/grpetersen1


5 Comments
Joyce Schultz
6/21/2018 08:10:40 pm

In 1998 found high levels of protein in blood. Cancer wasnt mentioned, they said without symptoms there wasn’t anything to look for. Fast forward to 2008 diagnosed with kidney failure, high calcium levels and bone damage, resulting in disability from multiple myeloma....there has to be a way to catch this sooner. Another thing besides going to a myeloma specialist, is for the patient to be vigilant in their care. Just because you have an MRI scheduled for 2 months from now doesn’t mean you wait til then ...if you’re having problem go back to the DR now, don’t wait.

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Gary Petersen link
6/22/2018 07:40:56 am

Joyce, so sad it was not caught in 1998 so you could have been followed and treated before all the organ damage. So lucky and blessed to get past the first 2 years back in 98 when the death rate was 37.5%, and if dialysis dependent just 3 MONTHS. You advice is great we all have to be our own best advocate. Gary

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Linda
6/22/2018 01:13:50 pm

Amazing to have survived 20 years! My husband will not be so fortunate. No cancer in his family. When strange symptoms appeared after a hernia surgery we thought it was some nerve damage. Went through channels and Dr. had X- Ray which showed nothing ; an MRI would ne next to see what was causing pain. He went numb over 3 days time and MRI at ER showed tumors. That was 1.5 years ago and roller coaster since then. Aggressive form. A number of failed treatments and failed SCT. He only had a little window last year when he could work and now on disability. Present chemo making him quite sick and the infusions to treat side effects will be just ahead. Nasty disease with nasty treatments and prognosis poor.

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Gary Petersen link
6/22/2018 09:56:04 pm

Linda, you may want to get a second opinion from one of the myeloma specialists listed at the link http://www.myelomasurvival.com/myeloma-specialists-listing.html I have seen a few miracles occur including my own. In addition, clinical trials using BCMA as a target have shown excellent results. Good luck and God Bless your families myeloma journey/Gary.

Mark
6/30/2018 06:34:26 pm

I hope all is well with you health wise. I continue to do great.

Interesting topic. As a patient with 3 compression fractures, broken ribs, etc at diagnosis I know first hand how important early diagnosis is. I just wish the myeloma therapies were less toxic. I have never used carfilzomib but I have to worry when I see some of the cardiac toxicities and think that they are giving this drug to patients that may never develop myeloma. That is a problem with new therapies, you really do not know what type of long term side effects could be until there are long term survivors that used them extensively. One of the reasons I went the transplant route is that most studies (and my personal experience and the majority of the long term survivors I have met) show the majority of long term survivors having good to excellent QOL. Hopefully the same will be the case for people on long cycles of the current myeloma drugs.

It will be interesting to see what the results of the early treatment studies show. Hopefully they will show a high percentage of cured patients.

And yes, miracles do happen. Do not be afraid to go against conventional wisdom. I did and I am thrilled with the results!

Mark

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    Gary R. Petersen
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    CLICK HERE for my myeloma journey

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