Abstract

The survival rate of multiple myeloma (MM) patients has drastically increased recently as a result of the wide treatment options now available. Younger patients truly benefit from these innovations as they can support more intensive treatment, such as autologous stem cell transplant or multiple drug association (triplet, quadruplet). The emergence of immunotherapy allowed new combinations principally based on monoclonal anti-CD38 antibodies for these patients. Still, the optimal induction treatment has not been found yet. While consolidation is still debated, maintenance treatment is now well acknowledged to prolong survival. Lenalidomide monotherapy is the only drug approved in that setting, but many innovations are expected. Older patients, now logically named not transplant-eligible, also took advantage of these breakthrough innovations as most of the recent drugs have a more acceptable safety profile than previous cytotoxic agents. For this heterogenous subgroup, geriatric assessment has become an essential tool to identify frail patients and provide tailored strategies. At relapse, options are now numerous, especially for patients who were not treated with lenalidomide, or not refractory at least. Concerning lenalidomide refractory patients, approved combinations are lacking, but many trials are ongoing to fill that space. Moreover, innovative therapeutics are increasingly being developed with modern immunotherapy, such as chimeric antigen receptor T-cells (CAR-T cells), bispecific antibodies, or antibody-drug conjugates. For now, these treatments are usually reserved to heavily pre-treated patients with a poor outcome. MM drug classes have tremendously extended from historical alkylating agents to current dominant associations with proteasome inhibitors, immunomodulatory agents, and monoclonal anti-CD38/anti SLAMF7 antibodies. Plus, in only a couple of years, several new classes will enter the MM armamentarium, such as cereblon E3 ligase modulators (CELMoDs), selective inhibitors of nuclear export, and peptide-drug conjugates. Among the questions that will need to be answered in the years to come is the position of these new treatments in the therapeutic strategy, as well as the role of minimal residual disease-driven strategies which will be a key issue to elucidate. Through this review, we chose to enumerate and comment on the most recent advances in MM therapeutics which have undergone major transformations over the past decade.

Highlights

  • Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell malignancy which represents nearly 10% of all hematological malignancies

  • The results showed complete response or better (≥CR) rate of 39% in the dara-VTd group vs. 26% in the VTd alone group (p < 0.0001), and minimal residual disease (MRD) 10−5 negativity rate was in favor of dara-VTd, 64% vs. 44% (p < 0.0001), respectively

  • The treatment of multiple myeloma has profoundly transformed over the years with novel families of drugs, novel mechanisms of action, and the development of tailored therapy and biomarker-based therapy, as well as the emergence of immunotherapy, naïve and modern, cellular, and antibody-based

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell malignancy which represents nearly 10% of all hematological malignancies. Even though the treatment of newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM), transplant-eligible (TE), and not transplant-eligible (NTE) patients has remarkably improved over the years and multiple treatments are available, the disease will eventually relapse as MM remains not curable. From the old cytotoxic drugs to passive or active immunotherapy, the treatment of MM has greatly evolved over the past decade. Patients benefited from these innovations with prolonged survival, from a median of 3–5 years to 7–10 years nowadays. We comment on the most interesting advances, in our opinion, in the treatment of MM, from transplant-eligible to not transplant-eligible and relapse and/or refractory MM patients

Transplant-Eligible Patients
Induction Regimens
Autologous Stem Cell Transplant
Post-Transplant Consolidation
Maintenance Therapy
Risk-Adapted Therapy
Non-Transplant Eligible Patients
Ixazomib: A Convenient Drug for NTE Patients?
Relapse or Refractory Multiple Myeloma
First Relapse
TOURMALINE-MM1
Targeted Therapy
Modern Immunotherapy
Checkpoint Inhibitors
Findings
Conclusion
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