Survival Outcomes of Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma at a Tertiary Care Center in North India (IMAGe: 001A Study)

Author:

Yanamandra Uday1ORCID,Sharma Rajni1,Shankar Siddharth2,Yadav Shikha1,Kapoor Rajan3ORCID,Pramanik Suman1,Ahuja Ankur2,Kumar Rajiv4,Sharma Sanjeevan5,Das Satyaranjan6,Chatterjee Tathagata2,Somasundaram Venkatesan2,Verma Tarun1,Mishra Kundan1ORCID,Singh Jasjit7,Sharma Ajay1,Nair Velu1

Affiliation:

1. Army Hospital (RR), Delhi, India

2. IMAGe Research Scholar, Manipal Hospital, Delhi, India

3. Command Hospital (EC), Kolkata, India

4. Command Hospital (AF), Bengaluru, India

5. Command Hospital (CC), Lucknow, India

6. Command Hospital (SC), Pune, India

7. Command Hospital (WC), Chandimandir, India

Abstract

PURPOSE The outcomes of patients with myeloma from developing countries are often lacking because of poor record maintenance. Publications from such settings are also limited because of the retrospective nature of the data collection. Information technology can bridge these gaps in developing countries with real-time data maintenance. We present the real-time survival data of the patients with myeloma from a tertiary care center in North India using one such indigenously built software. PATIENTS AND METHODS These are real-time data of all patients with myeloma presenting to a tertiary care center from North India. The patient characteristics (demographics, baseline disease characteristics, risk stratification, and outcomes) were recorded contemporaneously. The survival of the study population was analyzed and grouped based on various disease characteristics at diagnosis. RESULTS The median age of the study population (N = 696) was 65.9 (34.9-94.9) years with male predominance (65%). The median follow-up was 3.7 years (0-18.6 years) with the median overall survival (OS) not achieved. The OS of the study population at 1, 3, and 5 years was 94% (n = 558), 87.5% (n = 394), and 83.1% (n = 267), respectively. Most of the patients presented in advanced stages based on International Staging System (III:70%). On Kaplan-Meier analysis, the presence of weight loss ( P = .01), renal dysfunction ( P = .047), and anemia at diagnosis ( P = .004) had a significant impact on survival. On Cox proportional model univariate analysis, the presence of renal dysfunction, anemia, and weight loss had the significant hazard ratio of 1.68 (1-2.82, P = .049), 3.18 (1.39-7.29, P = .0063), and 2.81 (1.22-6.42, P = .014), respectively, whereas on multivariate analysis of hypercalcemia, renal disease, anemia, and bone disease (CRAB) features, only anemia was found to have a significant hazard ratio of 2.56 (1.01-6.47, P = .046). CONCLUSION The real-world data show OS comparable with the published western literature. Only anemia was found to have significant impact on survival. The use of such software can aid in better data-keeping in resource-constrained settings.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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