Abstract

e19516 Background: Therapeutic regimens for multiple myeloma (MM) involve multiple pharmacological agents, including steroids. Many cause treatment-related symptoms that add to patient burden or may trigger treatment cessation. This study gathered qualitative data about the patient experience with MM treatments, including regimens with steroids. Findings were summarized and compared to the Patient Reported Outcome version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (PRO-CTCAE), to assess its comprehensiveness and relevance in MM clinical trials. Methods: Individual, semi-structured interviews were conducted virtually with a diverse sample of 16 US-based, English-speaking adults (38% male, 25% Black, 13% Hispanic) to explore their experiences with MM and treatments, including perspectives on steroids and potential benefits of steroid-sparing regimens. Content analysis was used to summarize and compare terminology participants used to describe their experiences with treatments. Results: Participants reported a diverse set of treatment-related symptoms impacting their overall experience, indicating the importance of assessing regimen tolerability in clinical trials. Steroids were linked to increased energy that interfered with sleep or functioning, irritability, taste changes, weight gain, increased appetite, and cognitive symptoms like brain fog. Participants reported that most symptoms were tolerable, but they would prefer to avoid steroids if treatment benefits did not diminish. Many reported symptoms were included in the PRO-CTCAE items (see Table), but several symptoms related to regimens with steroids are not covered: excess energy, bitter/metallic taste, taste sensitivity, brittle nails, irritability, hunger/increased appetite, and muscle weakness. Conclusions: MM patients experience a range of treatment-related symptoms, many of which impact their quality of life. If given the option, patients would prefer a steroid-free regimen if there was proven clinical benefit. While the PRO-CTCAE covers most of the treatment-related symptoms, proving to be an option for multiple myeloma clinical trials, additional PRO instruments may be needed to cover specific gaps in the PRO-CTCAE item library content coverage. [Table: see text]

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