AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines primary plasma cell leukemia (PCL), previously defined by ≥ 20% circulating plasma cells, now suggested to be diagnosed by a lower threshold of ≥ 2% CTCs, indicating it might just be ultra-high-risk multiple myeloma (MM).
  • Researchers measured CTC levels in 395 newly diagnosed transplant-ineligible MM patients and found that those with 2%-20% CTCs had poorer survival outcomes compared to those with < 2%, emphasizing the clinical relevance of a lower cutoff.
  • The findings support using the 2% cutoff as a potential biomarker for identifying hidden primary PCL and advocate for flow cytometry assessment during MM diagnosis to improve patient stratification and treatment decisions.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Primary plasma cell leukemia (PCL) is the most aggressive monoclonal gammopathy. It was formerly characterized by ≥ 20% circulating plasma cells (CTCs) until 2021, when this threshold was decreased to ≥ 5%. We hypothesized that primary PCL is not a separate clinical entity, but rather that it represents ultra-high-risk multiple myeloma (MM) characterized by elevated CTC levels.

Methods: We assessed the levels of CTCs by multiparameter flow cytometry in 395 patients with newly diagnosed transplant-ineligible MM to establish a cutoff for CTCs that identifies the patients with ultra-high-risk PCL-like MM. We tested the cutoff on 185 transplant-eligible patients with MM and further validated on an independent cohort of 280 transplant-ineligible patients treated in the GEM-CLARIDEX trial. The largest published real-world cohort of patients with primary PCL was used for comparison of survival. Finally, we challenged the current 5% threshold for primary PCL diagnosis.

Results: Newly diagnosed transplant-ineligible patients with MM with 2%-20% CTCs had significantly shorter progression-free survival (3.1 15.6 months; < .001) and overall survival (14.6 33.6 months; = .023) than patients with < 2%. The 2% cutoff proved to be applicable also in transplant-eligible patients with MM and was successfully validated on an independent cohort of patients from the GEM-CLARIDEX trial. Most importantly, patients with 2%-20% CTCs had comparable dismal outcomes with primary PCL. Moreover, after revealing a low mean difference between flow cytometric and morphologic evaluation of CTCs, we showed that patients with 2%-5% CTCs have similar outcomes as those with 5%-20% CTCs.

Conclusion: Our study uncovers that ≥ 2% CTCs is a biomarker of hidden primary PCL and supports the assessment of CTCs by flow cytometry during the diagnostic workup of MM.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9995102PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JCO.22.01226DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

primary pcl
20
patients
11
ctcs
9
plasma cells
8
plasma cell
8
multiple myeloma
8
flow cytometry
8
newly diagnosed
8
diagnosed transplant-ineligible
8
transplant-eligible patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!