AI Article Synopsis

  • Many multiple myeloma patients show fewer signs of secretory disease and increased cases of extramedullary disease, complicating treatment tracking through imaging and biopsies.
  • A case study of a 73-year-old male highlights the usefulness of mass spectrometry to detect monoclonal proteins in patients who are not producing enough protein to be properly monitored.
  • Mass spectrometry offers greater sensitivity in identifying disease progression, potentially allowing more patients to qualify for clinical trials and improving their ongoing treatment monitoring.

Article Abstract

Introduction: After receiving different lines of treatment, multiple myeloma patients tend to present with less secretory and more frequent extramedullary disease. These features make treatment monitoring and follow-up very complex since they have to be based on the use of imaging methods and/or bone marrow aspirations or biopsies.

Objective: To present the case of a patient with myeloma progressing with non-secretory bone disease and to discuss the potential impact of mass spectrometry as a new highly sensitive method able to identify the monoclonal protein (MP) in the serum of these types of patients.

Materials And Methods: Informed consent was signed by the patient prior to receiving each line of treatment. The clinical information and images were obtained from anonymized electronic files. The mass spectrometry was performed with the Immunoglobulin Isotypes (GAM) assay for the mass spectrometry EXENT Analyser Technology from Binding Site, part of Thermofisher.

Results: A 73-year-old male with IgG kappa multiple myeloma progressing with a new lytic lesion after receiving 14 cycles of Talquetamab as a third line of therapy who, due to the non-secretory nature of the disease at this point, could not be enrolled in a clinical trial, thus limiting his therapeutic options. The mass spectrometry was able to identify and quantify the presence of the patient's MP when the serum protein electrophoresis and immunofixation were still negative and therefore could have been used to confirm the progression, to permit the inclusion of the patient in a clinical trial and to further monitor the disease response.

Conclusions: The higher sensitivity of the mass spectrometry methods to detect the MP in patients with myeloma and other monoclonal gammopathies translates into better identification of the disease progression, permits the inclusion of more patients in clinical trials and facilitates treatment monitoring.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11200560PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12061153DOI Listing

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