A Prognostic Survival Model Incorporating Patient-Reported Outcomes for Transplant-Ineligible Patients With Multiple Myeloma

Author:

Mian Hira1ORCID,Seow Hsien1,Balitsky Amaris K1,Cheung Matthew C2,Gayowsky Anastasia3,Tay Jason4,Wildes Tanya M5,McCurdy Arleigh6,Visram Alissa6,Sandhu Irwindeep7,Sutradhar Rinku89

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oncology, McMaster University , Hamilton, ON , Canada

2. Department of Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON , Canada

3. ICES, McMaster University , Hamilton, ON , Canada

4. Department of Medicine, University of Calgary , Calgary, AB , Canada

5. Department of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center/Nebraska Medicine , Omaha, NE , USA

6. Department of Medicine, The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, University of Ottawa , Ottawa, ON , Canada

7. Department of Medicine, University of Edmonton , Edmonton, AB , Canada

8. Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON , Canada

9. Division of Biostatistics, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Developing prognostic tools specifically for patients themselves represents an important step in empowering patients to engage in shared decision-making. Incorporating patient-reported outcomes may improve the accuracy of these prognostic tools. We conducted a retrospective population-based study of transplant-ineligible (TIE) patients with multiple myeloma (MM) diagnosed between January 2007 and December 2018. A multivariable Cox regression model was developed to predict the risk of death within 1-year period from the index date. We identified 2356 patients with TIE MM. The following factors were associated with an increased risk of death within 1 year: age > 80 (HR 1.11), history of heart failure (HR 1.52), “CRAB” at diagnosis (HR 1.61), distance to cancer center (HR 1.25), prior radiation (HR 1.48), no proteosome inhibitor/immunomodulatory therapy usage (HR 1.36), recent emergency department (HR 1.55) or hospitalization (HR 2.13), poor performance status (ECOG 3-4 HR 1.76), and increasing number of severe symptoms (HR 1.56). Model discrimination was high with C-statistic of 0.74, and calibration was very good. To our knowledge, this represents one of the first prognostic models developed in MM incorporating patient-reported outcomes. This survival prognostic tool may improve communication regarding prognosis and shared decision-making among older adults with MM and their health care providers.

Funder

Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ministry

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference27 articles.

1. Early mortality in multiple myeloma: risk factors and impact on population outcomes;Costa,2014

2. Symptom burden in transplant ineligible patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma: a population-based cohort study;Mian,2021

3. Second Revision of the International Staging System (R2-ISS) for overall survival in multiple myeloma: a European Myeloma Network (EMN) report within the HARMONY project;D’Agostino,2022

4. Revised international staging system for multiple myeloma: a Report From International Myeloma Working Group;Palumbo,2015

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