Myeloma

Cancer of the plasma cells; these are a type of B lymphocyte that produce antibodies

Aetiology

  • Median age at diagnosis - 65 years
  • Other risk factors include:
    • MGUS (annual progression risk ≈1%)
    • Smoldering multiple myeloma
    • Male sex
    • Family history
    • Environmental exposure (radiation, chemicals)

Pathophysiology

notion image
  • Plasma cells are B cells (B lymphocytes) of the immune system that have become activated to produce a certain antibody; they are found in the bone marrow
  • Myeloma is a cancer of a specific type of plasma cell where there is a genetic mutation causing it to rapidly and uncontrollably multiply
  • These plasma cells produce one type of antibody (immunoglobulin)
  • When you measure the immunoglobulins in a patient with myeloma, one of those types will be significantly abundant → monoclonal paraprotein
    • More than 50% of the time this is immunoglobulin type G (IgG)
    • The ‘Bence Jones protein’ that can be found in the urine of many patients with myeloma is actually a part (subunit) of the antibody called the light chains

How does myeloma affect the body?

  • Myeloma bone disease - dysregulation of bone remodelling leads to the typical lytic lesions, usually seen in the spine, skull, long bones and ribs
    • There is increased osteoclastic activity without increased osteoblast formation of bone, causing fractures of long bones, vertebral collapse and hypercalcaemia
    • Soft tissue plasmacytomas also occur and they are the usual cause of spinal cord compression
  • Bone marrow infiltration with plasma cells - results in anaemia, neutropenia, and thrombocytopenia
  • Paraprotein secretion - may (rarely) result in symptoms of hyperviscosity
    • In addition, there is a reduction in the levels of normal immunoglobulin (immune paresis), contributing to the tendency to contract recurrent infections
  • Myeloma renal disease - 30% of patients have renal impairment at diagnosis, due to a number of factors:
    • Free light chain secretion leads to deposition in the renal tubules, causing renal impairment by cast nephropathy
    • Other factors such as hypercalcaemia, use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and, rarely, the deposition of AL amyloid can also contribute to renal injury

Clinical Presentation

Symptoms
  • Bone pain (back, ribs, hips)
  • Fatigue and weakness
  • Recurrent infections
  • Weight loss
  • Pathological fractures
Signs
  • Pallor
  • Bone tenderness
  • Vertebral collapse
  • Neurologic deficits (cord compression)

Investigations

Hematological Tests

  • Normocytic normochromic anemia
  • Rouleaux formation on peripheral smear
  • ESR markedly elevated

Biochemical Tests

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Elevated creatinine
  • Hypoalbuminemia
  • Increased β₂-microglobulin

Myeloma-Specific Tests

Serum Studies
  • Serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP): M spike
  • Immunofixation electrophoresis
  • Serum free light chain assay (κ/λ ratio)
Urine Studies
  • Bence Jones proteins (free light chains)
  • 24-hour urine protein electrophoresis

Bone Marrow Examination

  • ≥10% clonal plasma cells
  • Atypical plasma cells with binucleation

Imaging

  • Skeletal survey: punched-out lytic lesions
  • MRI spine: cord compression
  • PET-CT: disease burden assessment

Diagnostic Criteria

Core Diagnostic Requirement

Requirement
Criteria
Clonal plasma cells
≥10% clonal plasma cells in bone marrow OR biopsy-proven plasmacytoma
PLUS at least ONE myeloma-defining event (MDE)
 

Myeloma-Defining Events (MDE)

CRAB Criteria (End-Organ Damage)
Component
Diagnostic Threshold
C – Hypercalcemia
Serum calcium >11 mg/dL or >1 mg/dL above ULN
R – Renal failure
Creatinine ≥2 mg/dL or CrCl <40 mL/min
A – Anemia
Hb <10 g/dL or ≥2 g/dL below normal
B – Bone lesions
≥1 lytic lesion on X-ray / CT / PET-CT
Biomarkers of Malignancy (New IMWG Criteria)
Biomarker
Diagnostic Cut-off
Bone marrow plasma cells
≥60% clonal plasma cells
Serum free light chain ratio
Involved/uninvolved ratio ≥100
MRI focal lesions
>1 focal lesion (≥5 mm)
Presence of any one biomarker = diagnostic of multiple myeloma, even without CRAB features.
 

Management

  • Myeloma is currently seen as an incurable chronic disease - usually takes a relapsing-remitting course, treatment aims to improve quality of life and prolong survival

Haematopoietic stem cell transplant

  • This is a treatment option with young patients who have minimal comorbidities

Chemotherapy

  • Combination chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment
    • Thalidomide in combination with an alkylating agent (e.g. melphalan) and a corticosteroid (e.g. dexamethasone) is first line
  • Use paraprotein level to monitor response

Symptom control

  • Opiate analgesia (avoid NSAIDs)
  • Local radiotherapy - good for pain relief or spinal cord compression
  • Bisphonates - corrects hypercalcaemia and bone pain
  • Vertebroplasty - inject sterile cement into fractured bone to stabilise